Tool to test AMD CPUs?

Sorry I don’t have any advice, but I have a question: why are you testing CPUs? I don’t do much hardware troubleshooting these days so maybe that’s why I don’t do it. Are you building machines? Or is the test part of broader troubleshooting?
 
Sorry I don’t have any advice, but I have a question: why are you testing CPUs? I don’t do much hardware troubleshooting these days so maybe that’s why I don’t do it. Are you building machines? Or is the test part of broader troubleshooting?
We have a gaming rig that I highly suspect has a faulty AMD CPU. I would just like to have a smoking gun instead of guessing.
 
I've gotten to a point where I keep a few spare CPU's in the shop (or I'll order one of whichever generation/Brand needed). If I think a CPU is the problem - I plop a new one in, assuming I've exhausted everything else.
 
I've gotten to a point where I keep a few spare CPU's in the shop (or I'll order one of whichever generation/Brand needed). If I think a CPU is the problem - I plop a new one in, assuming I've exhausted everything else.
Yes, this is a very valid point. That probably would be best. The only drawback is I might get stuck with some CPU's that, by the time the opportunity arrives for me to move those, I might have to take a loss.
 
I Just keep one of each of these CPU's which covers most modern equipment (not the top-enders):

AMD AM4 - (Most boards support 3000, 4000, 5000 series) - Ryzen 5600G - ~$130
AMD AM5 - (Most board support 7000, 8000, 9000 series) - Ryzen 8500G - ~$148
Intel LGA 1700 - (Most board support 12th, 13th, 14th gen) - i5-13400F ~$145

I like to get the G-Chips, "With Radeon Graphics" for the AMD's so I can test without dedicated graphics.
In the end if I feel it's getting "too old", I'll build a system with the parts and sell it, usually (at a reasonable discounted price of course) and recoup the raw costs. Honestly, though, with the time and effort saved by having these here for testing, it pays back in spades!
 
Have you received the results you felt were accurate using the Intel tool, even with AMD?
A CPU is a CPU... it either runs the operations and returns the expected result or it doesn't.

Math doesn't stop being math because the calculator's brand changes!

There are a few misalignments in the instruction set tests, but otherwise... yeah... let it rip!
 
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