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Review: AMD Ryzen 3 1300X and Ryzen 3 1200

by Tarinder Sandhu on 27 July 2017, 13:58

Tags: AMD (NYSE:AMD)

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Conclusion

Bringing Ryzen 3 into play has presented AMD with a dilemma insofar as the best means by which to hit the appropriate performance points.

The introduction of a couple of Ryzen 3 processors provides PC enthusiasts with the opportunity of buying into the latest Zen architecture from as little as £100, with AMD targetting the £500-£750 base-unit market through a combination of these chips allied to the B350 chipset.

Bringing Ryzen 3 into play has presented AMD with a dilemma insofar as the best means by which to hit the appropriate performance points. The company has decided to use the same guts as on all other Ryzen CPUs - so an eight-core Zeppelin composed of two CCXes - but limit Ryzen 3 to four cores whilst also disabling performance-boosting SMT.

The upshot of such an approach is Ryzen 3 1300X and 1200 performance that is marginally better than Intel Core i3 in heavy-load scenarios but not as sharp for lightly-threaded tasks. Gaming is pretty much a tie once a decent graphics card is in place. However, if you can squeeze and extra £40 into the CPU budget, the SMT-enabled Ryzen 5 1400 is most likely a better bet.

AMD Ryzen 3 is a heavy-duty approach at solving the Core i3-beating problem, and by its very nature does not support integrated graphics, unlike the Intel competition. That said, it is hard to argue against the overall value, so if it was our money on the line and appreciating that both Ryzen 3s are hewn from the same cloth, we'd opt for the cheaper Ryzen 3 1200, at £105, and overclock it to 3.7GHz on all cores for plenty of bang for buck and solid all-round performance.

The Good
 
The Bad
Solid value
Impressive multi-core performance
Easy upgrade path
Lots of motherboard choice
 
Lack of IGP may hurt target market



AMD Ryzen 3 1300X and Ryzen 3 1200

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The Ryzen 3 1300X and Ryzen 3 1200 are available to buy from Scan Computers*

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HEXUS Forums :: 9 Comments

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Whilst these can be characterised as “R7s with bits turned off” there's no way that AMD would be throwing away money by doing that.

Almost all of these are lower-binned dies off the wafer with various flaws.
AMD could throw them away or they could recover some value by disabling the sections with faults and selling them off as lower-spec CPUs until they get their yields up (at which point you can expect to see supply of the lower-spec processors dry up at the same time as higher spec ones come down in price)

In the meantime, we have an opportunity to grab nice CPUs for a low figure. The sheer number of PCIe lanes is useful for many applications that don't require high CPU power and whilst the lack of IGP might be annoying to some, it's not really a big deal when you can buy a card cheaply for the job at hand - in many cases all that's actually needed is a text console anyway.
These really are quite low binned, I have my 1600 at 3.7mhz on 1.3v.
I'm curious to see how these compare to phenoms and the fx 6300 or how they will compare to a single ccx apu.

Interestingly, I just looked on Scan and the 7350k is at £100
Pi fast is none issue for me, what I am after is Cinebench


Err, did the R5 1400 and R3 1300X labels get swapped?

jamz4
These really are quite low binned, I have my 1600 at 3.7mhz on 1.3v.
I'm curious to see how these compare to phenoms and the fx 6300 or how they will compare to a single ccx apu.

Interestingly, I just looked on Scan and the 7350k is at £100

That's surprisingly cheap, and it makes the 7300 completely pointless - the ~£35 price difference more than makes up for the lack of a cooler. The 7100's sole purpose is to be £10 cheaper than the 7350K!
Even better deal at Scan for the 7350K, even if the MB bundled is over kill for this CPU:

https://www.scan.co.uk/products/asus-rog-maximus-viii-hero-z170-atx-motherboard-plus-intel-core-i3-7350k-unlocked-dual-core-kaby-lak