
The failure on the new AMD CPUs is still too high.
AMD Ryzen 5950x x50 units 8 doa
AMD Ryzen 5900x x50 units 4 doa
AMD Ryzen 5800x x100 units 4 doa
AMD Ryzen 5600x x120 units 3 doaWe only had 1 dead Intel CPU, that was a 9700 000 in our business time
Doa: death on arrival
– PowerGPU® (@PowerGPU) 13 February 2021
PowerGPU says they received 50 units of the Ryzen 9 5950X and Ryzen 9 5900X, of which eight were from the former DOAs, and four from the later ones as well. It occurs on 12 out of 100 chips from the Ryzen 9 family. In addition, the builder says it received 100 units from the Ryzen 7 5800X, four of which arrived at DOA, and 120 units from the Ryzen 5 5600X, three of which were defective.
According to PowerGPU, these are not only the latest AMD CPUs to beat with a higher cut than Intel, but are also motherboards based on the accompanying 500-series chips. It has the “highest failure rate, “says the company.”Every week it is at least 3-5 plates DOA from B550 to X570s, “PowerGPU reads in a follow-up tweet.

To give more intrigue to the situation, it seems that PowerGPU suggests that even some non-DOA chips sometimes have problems, in the short time it has been implemented in constructions. A user commented in the Twitter thread that they submitted their Ryzen 9 5900X because they ‘USB 3 lane was deadd “and others”foreign stability issues. “PowerGPU responded to the report and said:”Yes, we had it too. Just weird problems with certain.“
The situation has attracted the attention of prominent leaks on Twitter, claiming that PowerGPU is not the only one getting into trouble with Zen 3.
At the same time, the same analyst says that a personal cell phone computer builder in Korea told them that PowerGPU’s alleged failure rate is “ridiculous, “and note that the sample size is too small, since we are only talking about a few hundred CPUs.
We will monitor the situation to see if anything develops further. As things stand at present, we have a single computer builder raising eyebrows over an alleged high DOA rate among several hundred CPUs received, and a bit of subsequent tweaking in the Twitter thread to bring it to attention. We do not reject the demands of the builder, but neither do we alarm. We will have to wait and see if there are any more complaints.