






🔥 Power your productivity and play with Ryzen 5 2600X — where smart meets speed!
The AMD Ryzen 5 2600X is a 6-core, 12-thread processor clocked at 3.6 GHz with a 95W TDP, featuring AMD SenseMI technology for adaptive performance and bundled with the efficient Wraith Spire cooler. Compatible with the AM4 socket and X470 chipset, it offers a future-proof platform ideal for gamers and creators seeking reliable multitasking and overclocking capabilities.







| ASIN | B07B428V2L |
| Are Batteries Included | No |
| Batteries | 1 A batteries required. |
| Best Sellers Rank | 191,769 in Computers & Accessories ( See Top 100 in Computers & Accessories ) 678 in CPUs |
| Brand | AMD |
| Colour | Black |
| Computer Memory Type | DDR4 SDRAM |
| Customer Reviews | 4.8 4.8 out of 5 stars (9,286) |
| Date First Available | 19 April 2018 |
| Guaranteed software updates until | unknown |
| Hardware Platform | PC |
| Item Weight | 454 g |
| Item model number | YD260XBCAFBOX |
| Lithium Battery Energy Content | 2 Kilowatt Hours |
| Lithium Battery Packaging | Batteries packed with equipment |
| Lithium Battery Weight | 2 Grams |
| Manufacturer | AMD |
| Number Of Lithium Ion Cells | 5 |
| Number of Lithium Metal Cells | 5 |
| Processor Brand | AMD |
| Processor Count | 6 |
| Processor Socket | Socket AM4 |
| Processor Speed | 3.6 GHz |
| Processor Type | Ryzen 5 |
| Product Dimensions | 4.06 x 4.06 x 0.76 cm; 453.59 g |
| Series | YD260XBCAFBOX |
| Voltage | 220 Volts |
| Wattage | 95 watts |
| Wireless Type | Bluetooth |
E**Y
Excellent good value processor.
I bought one of these processors in 2019 and installed it in a new computer I'd just built and it's been an absolute dream. It's almost near the end of October 2024 and it's still doing great. I use the computer for everything including online gaming and it handles everything without a hitch and when coupled with a decent mid-range graphics card you can play most games. Of course they are improving things all of the time but to be honest, I see no need to change the processor or graphics card as they still do all I ask of them.
M**A
Fast chip for gaming.
I bought this chip from amazon warehouse as it was a good offer with prime delivery. It arrived promptly and works perfectly. The outer packaging was not present which was outlined in the description of the warehouse offer. despite this i did get everything that would be in the box; the CPU in a clam shell with the case badge and the stock cooler. I picked this one over the 2700x as the extra cores would be wasted in my system as a gamer. multi threading is still not common. It is a solid CPU which handles everything i have used it for so far gaming, streaming and web browsing with many tabs. I haven't used the stock cooler for this CPU but AMD are pretty good at setting the stock speeds to balance well with the included cooler. With water cooling it is an easy overclocker and AMD provide the tools to get it running the best it can. bottom line; its a great chip and worth every penny especial for gaming
B**E
Cheap, fast, reliable
This processor is easily one of if not the best price to performance CPU on the market. Runs pretty much anything I want at very high/ultra settings at 1080p with tons of room to spare. I reckon it will also be pretty good for 1440p gaming as so far I have never really utilised more than 60% of the CPU while gaming. Super reliable, I overclocked the base speed to 4GHz and haven't ran into any blue screens or issues there. All round it's probably the best processor for £130.
J**N
The Perfect Upgrade to go in a compact build surprisingly.
I have been waiting so long to finally upgrade my Gaming rig for a while from a 4790k and GTX 970. Which was MSI everything edition of course as the GPU matched the Z97 motherboard like a dream. That gaming rig lasted me 5 years and is still going strong, however, I was after something a lot newer to go in a new compact build I wanted to try out. I was more daring with my next rig and wanted something more compact portable and different from the norm. Choosing this CPU was an obvious choice and the price point I have to say AMD has got this so right. Do not get my wrong I used to use INTEL and swore by it but this time AMD has won me over with their 2600x Ryzen 5 line. Using the stock cooler and with stock thermal paste, I am getting an okay 40c at idle, however, if you use an aftermarket cooler like a water cooler you will see the thermals drop further. Keep in mind for the case I am using I was expecting way higher thermals due to the design of the case and this CPU underload gets to about 65c to 70 which I think is fairly normal while the rest of the system stays about 40c. Not exactly temperatures to be worried about. Obviously, lower is better but you have to be realistic when your CPU turbos it will generate more heat but to me, 65c to 70 under full load is perfectly acceptable and my intel CPU was no different in a bigger case. If I disable the turbo, my temps, at idle are 30c so it must be the turbo kicking in and out which is giving me the 40c idle. Overall I am very happy with my build love the CPU which is basically the heart of any gaming build. I highly recommend the 2600 OR 2600x I only purchased the 2600x as the 2600 was more expensive at the time. BUY THIS CPU, YOU WILL NOT BE DISAPPOINTED!
K**A
Had no problems.
I did a lot of research before deciding which Ryzen to go for and for bang for buck I'm very happy I went with this one. I needed my PC to be capable of editing in Photoshop quickly and easily as well as Premiere and other Adobe products. Ryzen 5 2600x accomplishes this very nicely. All the videos I edit are HD and it runs smoothly. My computer is super speedy and managing to handle anything I throw at it, so far gaming wise I've played Skyrim, Planet Coaster, Sims 3 and 4 with absolutely no problems. The stock cooler it comes with is also doing a fine and dandy job, happy with this choice.
S**.
Quite capable - Fantastic value for 1080p High refresh gaming
The 2600x is performing brilliantly for me, I have moved between builds lately and am currently using this paired with a ROG motherboard and a 1660 super. For general computing this is going to be fantastic and with the right storage and ram you will get superb results.I have 3000 mhz 16gb ddr4 ram installed and a nvme ssd and the computer is quite responsive . I know I can improve this further with higher mhz ram as ryzen loves fast ram - though Im comfortable with the overall performance I have, bearing in mind I make smart choices in my games settings as well as my windows configuration. Surprisingly I get around 250 to 300 fps in counter strike go at 1920 x 1080, and in Call Of Duty in multiplayer mode I get 120 - 170ish(these numbers are based on g sync numbers I will add).I can recommend this as a good balanced cpu for medium productivity - It shouldnt hold you back from casual streaming or esport games - and if you are intuitive with configuring windows and gameing settings in general I can see this giving you good long term value - though with the current gpu cpu loads set to change in the next few months I am not sure how requirements will change, though this cpu has 6 cores with 12 threads, and is overclockable, so it should hold up well.Id recommend picking up this or one of the newer Ryzens, especially with the performance for price offered with Ryzen and the support for pcie gen 4 in ryzen motherboards - Intel needs to move closer to the speed of progress the ryzen line has shown. The cpu has been stable and performed quite well for me and I can recommend it.
O**L
I changed my PC after ten years! I went with AMD as it was so much cheaper and better, looking at the data below. The i7-8700K, the Intel equivalent, is $380.00 verses $200.00 for the AMD 2600X. I used the same power supply, case, mouse, keyboard ETC as it all was newer. You can see the set-up I did this time. The GPU is in the middle slot to give the CPU cooler a tunnel of air straight through the system. The NVMe drive sits under the CPU cooler and gets air pulled across it. The GPU is AIO hybrid type so no hot air in the case. Yes, I oriented the cooler to shoot straight up as this seems best to send hot air UP out the top of the case and not into the GPU radiator. Temps so far support the set-up. Real neat and clean this time around. I have a pretty good CPU and NOCTUA DH-15S cooler, so it auto dynamic clocks (what AMD calls XFR2) to 4.9 GHz on all cores! I don't do a thing, as it is all stock. Even the fans are cool-and-quiet and ramp based on temps. This is a great PC! The ASRock X470 is great, too, with that 1 GB ADATA NVMe SSD drive blazing along with W10 pro. The memory XMP profiled to the right timings and speed straight away with the Taichi MB...dead stable. The Heaven 4.0 scores are 15 FPS faster than the i7-870 in the old system with the same 1070ti clocks (see attached). That AMD CPU kicks butt for the price. If you are thinking of a PC, the 2600X allows you to afford the a NVMe drive and/or a faster graphics card. I game at 1440P so the fastest CPU is a waste of money. Ran Wolfenstein - The New Order all day today and not a single hick-up. The system exceeded my expectations, that's for sure. AMD SYSTEM BRAND PRICE MB ASRock X470 Taichi AM4 AMD $199.99 CPU AMD Ryzen 7 2600X 3.6GHz $209.99 DDR4 MEMORY* G.Skill Flare-X 16GB 2 x 8GB DDR4-3200 - F4-3200C14D-16GFX $224.98 1GB ADATA SX8200 3D NAND NVMe Gen3x4 M.2 SSD $208.99 OS W10 Professsional OEM 64 bit $149.50 GPU EVGA 1070ti hybrid $550.00 I kept my case and PS; Phantek ENTHOO PRO Glass Corsair HX-750 Here is the data on XFR2 actual function. Look at the dynamic OC difference! ~4.3 GHz on one and ~4.9 GHz on the other! VCPU core adjust from less than a volt to 1.48 volts. Remember that the numbers are "max" at any time, not at one point in time. So ALL cores aren't likely ever at those frequencies at the same time, just the ones that are needing the boost. Unlike a manual over clock, you aren't stuck revving the CPU engine in neutral wasting power on cores that don't have work, and, generating HEAT that slows down the thread you DO want to be running hardest! This is why the AMD set-up is so compelling now, It allows every last bit of performance to be reached with minimal HEAT generation as ONLY the cores / clocks that NEED the boost get it. Eventually, they all seem to see a set peak GHz value (I don't think my 2600X can run 4.93 GHz on all cores simultaneously) running randomly at full tilt. If you look at the CPU and GPU utilization scores you'll see dramatic differences between games. One runs the CPU hard, the other the GPU. The CPU processor adjust to fit the requirements. And, it adjusts a LOT more than I ever though it would. With fixed over clock you really match ONE type of game and spin your wheels on the other. XFR2 senses the wheel spin on the CPU and backs it off if it can't drive performance forward on everything you do. And yes, it backs off the CPU voltage on that core, you can watch it dynamically change on each core. This lowers overall heats to the minimum at any point in time for the work being done. I sound like an add for AMD's XFR2, but I'm just the opposite, I was real nervous about the expense on a seemingly too good to be true dynamic OC program. But, it really does work and the data supports it 100% using real games and actual use situations. This CPU is 3.6 GHz base clock, but dynamically OC to near 5 GHz! And, this was gaming for 12 hours straight on Wolfenstein with ZERO crashes. Someone has to do this test, may as well be me. This PC is dead stable hitting those numbers. If you don't believe the AMD propaganda, it is true this time around. Let's add the second important variable, cooling. The AMD Cool and Quiet was panned in the beginning. Now, it supercharges the XFR2 capability as it cools ONLY when needed. The old way was top blow the house down 24/7. Now? I hear the fans spin up in game and then spin down again. The cooling is DYNAMIC as well, so less noise most of the time. The X470 Taichi MB chip set tested my fans min speeds at initialization so it knows their limits and away it went after that. Both systems work seamlessly on my PC. Seldom does this ever happen. I didn't mess with a thing, no CPU overclocks, no fan profiles, nothing. I see completely reasonable heats, too. The 2600X is definitely the little engine that could, and DOES! Or should I say, AMD DOES! HEAVEN WOLFENSTEIN CPU LOWER HIGHER GPU 100% 40% CPU TEMP 57 C 67 C GPU TEMP 56 C 40 C CPU CLOCK 4.3 GHz 4.9 GHz
L**O
tres bon produit je recommande
R**E
I have been using Core i7 for like 10 years. Motherboard's south bridge chipset got burnt and I had to buy a complete new PC. After reading tons of reviews for a decent gaming processor, I drilled down to this baby. Its been a week and it runs everything that I throw at it. There are so many motherboards available for this, but I went with Asus Prime X470 Pro. A decent second gen Mobo for X series Unlocked Ryzen Processors. Pros : Stock Cooler was quite and temperatures were in range from 53 to 75. But I went with Corsair H100i V2 Liquid Cooler and now my temps remain in 34-50 range. Auto Boost is available and enuff space to Overclock. Since this is the X version, it supports DDR4 speeds upto 3400ish. Cons : AMD could have given the RGB Cooler with this CPU since this is the flagship at Ryzen 5 Level. Final verdict : If you are looking for a decent gaming processor then this one is a beast. Save some money from buying i7 8700k or 2700x and buy a good liquid cooler to pair with this baby
L**O
Innegabile: attualmente, anche i processori con qualche anno sul groppone sono in grado di offrire un'esperienza d'uso soddisfacente per l'utente medio, per chiunque usufruisca di contenuti piuttosto che crearne. Lo scenario quotidiano contempla l'utilizzo di software di produttività personale a pagamento/abbonamento, come Microsoft Office 365 Home, o free, come LibreOffice e riproduzione di file multimediali con VLC, Kodi o simili. Per la maggior parte del tempo, però, ci si ritroverà davanti alla schermata del nostro browser di elezione, l'applicazione che ormai catalizza buona parte dell'utilizzo del pc. Ecco: nonostante ormai siano ben più pesanti rispetto a diversi anni fa, zavorrati da miriadi di funzioni, girano più o meno degnamente su un qualsiasi processore multicore più o meno recente. Diverso il discorso per i creatori di contenuti o i videogiocatori. In quel caso, potremmo semplificare, dicendo che la potenza non basta mai; in realtà, per quanto mi riguarda, penso risulti fondamentale il rapporto prezzo-prestazioni. Ovviamente, niente ci vieta di investire somme anche importanti per i nostri computer. Quasi niente: i soldi, uno, se non ce l'ha, mica se li può dare. A oggi, fine marzo 2019, AMD offre processori dal rapporto prezzo-prestazioni particolaremente favorevole e voglio occuparmi, in particolare, del Ryzen 5 2600, nelle versioni "liscia" e X, la versione che possiedo. Intanto, perché AMD e non Intel? Da non esperto, penso che Intel, in questo momento storico, stia navigando a vista, cercando di spremere un'architettura ormai concettualmente vecchia e caratterizzata da diverse vulnerabilità. Un numero di core più limitato ma dalla frequenza più elevata, retaggio della corsa ai GHz di diversi anni fa. Uno scenario "ottimale", se vogliamo, per i videogiocatori più esigenti: i motori che muovono i videogiochi odierni preferiscono le frequenze alte alla parallelizzazione spinta. In linea di massima, quindi, se usate il pc solo per giocare, probabilmente vorrete orientarvi su Intel. Spendendo (anche molto) di più, per via dei costi maggiori di processore, scheda madre e ventolad a comprare separatamente, sarete premiati da un frame rate più alto del 5/10% su determinati giochi e da benchmark parimenti superiori in determinate applicazioni. Ne vale la pena? No, credo. I processori Ryzen 5 2600 e Ryzen 5 2600X offrono 6 core e 12 thread senza grafica integrata e sono raffreddati, rispettivamente, dalle ventole incluse nel packaging nei modelli Wraith Stealth e Wraith Spire. Sono ventole di buona fattura e pure discretamente silenzione, che vi permetteranno anche di azzardare un piccolo overclock. Sì, perchè ci troviamo davanti a due processori "sbloccati", ovvero la cui frequenza può essere modificata da bios, a patto di possedere una scheda madre col chipset adeguato. Personalmente, ho ripiegato su una MSI B450M Pro-VDH V2, sulla quale ho montato un kit di ram 2x8 HyperX Predator, 3200 MHz CL16, modello pienamente compatibile con la scheda madre: è bastato attivare il protocollo XMP dal bios per vederle funzionare alla velocità nominale. Ricordate che i processori Ryzen delle generazioni 1 e 2 risentono particolarmente della velocità della ram, quindi propenderei per dei moduli da 3000/3200 MHz. Oltre, il rapporto prezzo-prestazioni inizia a precipitare. Quindi, in cosa si differenzia la versione liscia dalla X, oltre che per la ventola? Il TDP è più basso, 65W, quindi peserà marginalmente meno su alimentatore e bolletta; la velocità di base per i 6 core è 3.4 GHz, che sale a 3.9 in modalità boost. Per quanto riguarda la versione più spinta, ci troviamo di fronte a un TDP di 95W, che permette una velocità di base di 3.6 GHz, in grado di salire fino a 4.2. La versione X è, potremmo dire, overcloccata di fabbrica: se non avete voglia di smanettare con settaggi, frequenze e ventole, è quella che fa per voi; diversamente, se cercate un sistema relativamente meno esoso e non siete dei videogiocatori, la versione base sarà ben più che sufficiente. A chi sono rivolti questi processori con molti thread e un clock non estremo? Non particolarmente ai videogiocatori, come dicevo, nonostante le prestazioni siano di tutto rispetto e, praticamente, sono processori che non faranno assolutamente da collo di bottiglia fino a determinate risoluzioni e accoppiati a determinate schede video di fascia molto alta. Sono processori a tutto tondo, in grado di fornire prestazioni molto elevate con più applicativi attivi contemporaneamente, in tutti gli ambiti di utilizzo medio/avanzato: programmi di grafica 2d e 3d, editing video, compressione di file e filmati, oltre ovviamente a utilizzi più generici e basilari, quali suite office e navigazione. Validissimi anche per il gaming, specialmente se accoppiato allo streaming: l'elevato numero di thread non potrà che rendere più agevoli entrambe le operazioni. Spedizione velocissima, come da tradizione Amazon.
T**A
Great processor, still in daily use.
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