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The AMDFX 8-Core Black Edition FX-8300 is a high-performance octa-core processor designed for serious multitasking and demanding applications. With a base speed of 3.3 GHz and a turbo boost of 4.2 GHz, it offers exceptional performance while maintaining energy efficiency, making it ideal for video editing, 3D modeling, and more.
Processor | 3.3 GHz none |
Wireless Type | 802.11a |
Brand | AMD |
Item model number | FD8300WMHKBOX |
Item Weight | 1.76 ounces |
Product Dimensions | 0.79 x 1.97 x 0.02 inches |
Item Dimensions LxWxH | 0.79 x 1.97 x 0.02 inches |
Processor Brand | AMD |
Number of Processors | 8 |
Computer Memory Type | DDR3 SDRAM |
Manufacturer | AMD |
ASIN | B00TR8YL4W |
Is Discontinued By Manufacturer | No |
Date First Available | February 16, 2015 |
E**F
Good Processor
It was a good process until the end. I have to upgrade due to MS and MSI placing chipset limits
G**N
An Absolute Brute CPU for AM3+ Motherboards
I gave myself a project to build a virtual pinball setup. I wanted to be able to run tables from The Pinball Arcade and Pinball FX2. Some of the tables can be fairly demanding at the highest settings, so I needed a good mid-range system with adequate CPU, RAM, and GPU. I bought a custom-built mid-tower system off someone nearby on Craigslist.Gigabyte motherboard with AM3+ CPU socketAthlon II FX4 640 CPU with Rocketfish cooler8GB RAM250GB SSD (with Win10)500 GB HDD (for other storage)GeForce GTX 750 Ti GPUDVD/RW optical driveNetwork card6 USB3 portsAll at a very attractive price. I added an Xbox controller with force feedback to work the flippers, plunger, and select tables. I also built a frame to set a 46" Samsung 1080p TV sloped in the vertical orientation, as the pinball playing surface. I stand up and play or sit on a bar stool. It's the same height as a real pinball machine. Finally, I mounted satellite speakers to the sides of the frame, and added a subwoofer from an old PC speaker set.I loaded Steam and the pinball software, and then bought and downloaded about 20 tables. They ran pretty well, and we had a lot of fun in the rec room. You could sometimes experience a slight lag with the flippers and sometimes in multiball when a lot of activity was going on. I could tweak the settings to minimize this.After about 5 months, I decided an upgrade to a beefier CPU would get it up to prime specs for pinball. The AM3+ supports the final generation of AMD FX chips. I was looking at the FX-8300, FX-8320, and FX-8350. While they all come from the same die, the 8320 and 8350 passed higher benchmark tests at the factory when overclocked. You can really push these chips. The last 2 run at 125 watts, while the 8300 runs at 95 watts. Not a big issue, but we all want our chips to run as cool as possible.For the price/performance, and power issues, the FX-8300 was the best option. I do not plan on overclocking, as it is fast out of the box. It's nice to know this CPU arrives unlocked, and my bios allows me to boost if if I want.The Verdict:I couldn't believe how much faster this CPU runs than the old Athlon quad core CPU. It's night and day. Windows boots faster, the games load faster, and they run perfectly smooth on high settings. I am extremely happy with this CPU and I highly recommend it to anyone who has an AM3+ CPU socket. It's not the latest and greatest, but for the money, it is hard if not impossible to get more computing power at a price anywhere close to this. Any Intel chip that is comparable costs twice as much.With the 46" TV, the booming speakers, and the flipper controller, it looks great, sounds great, and plays great. I expect to have many pinball sessions with friends and family over the years. New tables are available every few months, and there are already well over 100 to choose from, so I will never run out of new pinball tables to play. It's like having a massive pinball collection in my rec room. In some ways, it is not the same as playing the real thing, but I'll never have to repair a finicky pinball machine, as they are always breaking down. My system should be trouble-free for many years. Some day I may build a more authentic looking cabinet so it looks and feels more like a real pinball machine.
S**H
Bad Processor locked in safety mode
This product was shipped to me broken locked in at 1.4 ghz safety mode. I just found out recently after 4 months of owning the cpu unfortunately and i went through diagnostic hell thinking it was my motherboard and almost replaced everything else except for the CPU. it was the last test I did with an old 1100T amd that confirmed it was the FX-8300 Cpu sent to me.I am using: Msi 970 gaming motherboard Ms-7693.In the photo I am stress testing the CPU with CPU-Z and it is incapable of going past 1.4ghz. Temps are great ofcourse being so downclocked. logical explanation is the previous owner pushed it way beyond it's capabilitiesHigh performance mode on-Maximum processor state: 100% Minimum processor state: 100%680watt psu with RTX 2070Temperature is at 30°c ofcourse being so severely underclocked*Update*: Seller says they are willing to replace the broken product! I haven't received it yet, but will update to 4 or more stars if it arrives.
J**N
Great choice for the "mid-life crisis" build
I'm an occasional gamer and audio-video editor with an older, more casual build. Since we're still in a relative consumer market sweet spot--when a new product comes out at high prices, while still forcing the next-oldest generation of product to come down--I picked one of these up willing to wait until Ryzen becomes more within my needs and means.Installation isn't any harder than any other CPU, though as always, I'd definitely caution against settling on the included heatsink. Before you skeptics roll your eyes, think of it this way; I just spent a good chunk of change (for me) on something that normally operates at well over a hundred degrees Farenheit, over long periods of time. The least I could do is add quality paste and a $20-30 sink and fan for insurance. Since most every CPU ships with a "meh" stock heatsink, I won't knock this one for doing the same.In terms of performance, you're getting a strong number-cruncher at less cost ($$$ or wattage) than most all of the other FX-8xxx, while only sacrificing a small amount of cache to top processors from the same series--ones that cost an additional $30/20W or more. If you want statistics, look at cpubenchmark[dot]net's value/performance comparison of this against the other big players (spoiler: as of today, this CPU is rated as the best value overall, better than AMD's 8350 and the big bad i7s).Here's my verdict: if, like me, you find yourself with an AM3+ board and aren't quite ready to jump to the new socket (definitely new MOBO, maybe new PS, etc), consider this CPU a highly affordable option to keep running just about anything you'd need until AM4 is more affordable.
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