Refurbished Ryzen 5 5500 Gaming PC 16GB DDR4 Asrock X370 Taichi RTX 3060 Ti 512GB SSD 500 Watt PSU

R10000,00

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Overview

Component Specifications & Features (New / Ideal Conditions)

First, here are the intended specs and features of each component, under “like new” conditions.

CPU: AMD Ryzen 5 5500

  • 6 cores, 12 threads

  • Base ~3.6 GHz, boost up to ~4.2 GHz

  • 65 W TDP

  • No integrated graphics (requires discrete GPU)

  • Supports DDR4, dual channel

  • Because it’s a newer generation (Zen 3), it offers quite good IPC (instructions per clock) for gaming and general workloads

Memory: 16 GB DDR4

  • Usually 2 × 8 GB modules, in dual-channel mode

  • The speed (e.g. 3000, 3200, etc.) and timings matter; better speed & tighter timings improve performance especially in games

  • 16 GB is sufficient for many modern games and multitasking, though heavy workloads or future software might push toward 32 GB

Motherboard: ASRock X370 Taichi

This is an older, high-end X370 motherboard for AM4, originally designed for earlier Ryzen generations, but still usable after BIOS updates / compatibility. Some key features:

  • Socket: AM4

  • Chipset: X370

  • Memory: 4 DIMM slots, up to ~64 GB DDR4, supporting overclocked frequencies (depending on CPU and memory)

  • PCIe Slots:

    • Two PCIe 3.0 x16 slots (for GPU)

    • Additional PCIe 2.0 / x1 slots for expansion

  • Storage / M.2:

    • One “Ultra M.2” slot supporting PCIe 3.0 ×4 / SATA3

    • One additional M.2 slot (lower bandwidth, sharing lanes)

  • Power delivery & VRM:

    • A robust design: 16 power phases, digital PWM, quality components (MOSFETs, chokes, capacitors)

    • It is considered one of the stronger X370 boards in terms of VRM strength.

  • I/O & features:

    • Multiple SATA ports (≥10 total)

    • USB 3.1 (Type-A & Type-C) ports on rear I/O

    • Onboard WiFi (802.11ac + Bluetooth) on some variants (Taichi often includes this)

    • Good audio, etc.

  • Limitations:

    • Because the motherboard is older, some features of newer chipsets (PCIe 4.0, etc.) won’t be present.

    • You’ll likely need a BIOS update to support newer Ryzen CPUs (if it wasn’t already updated). The board’s original support was for early Ryzen families; newer CPUs may require flashing.

GPU: NVIDIA RTX 3060 Ti

  • ~4,864 CUDA cores (depending on model)

  • 8 GB GDDR6 memory

  • Support for ray tracing (RT cores), DLSS / Tensor cores

  • Power draw under load roughly ~180–220 W depending on vendor/overclock

  • Very capable in 1080p / 1440p settings for modern games

SSD: 512 GB NVMe SSD

  • Assuming modern SSD, speeds (sequential read/write) in the range ~2–3.5 GB/s, depending on drive and condition

  • Interface used will be PCIe 3.0 ×4 (since X370 / AM4 of that era support up to PCIe 3.0)

  • In real use, random I/O performance (4K read/write) often is more important than raw sequential speeds

PSU: 500 W (refurbished / used)

  • A 500 W PSU can handle a system of this class if it’s high quality and still in good condition

  • The GPU and CPU are the main power consumers; plus motherboard, drives, fans, accessories

  • In a refurbished system, PSU is one of the more failure-prone / degraded components, so quality matters a lot


What Changes / Risks in a Refurbished Build

Because it’s refurbished / used, there are additional factors to consider. These affect reliability, performance headroom, and risk of failure.

Component Wear & Degradation

  • Cooling / thermal paste — The thermal interface between CPU cooler / heatsink and the CPU or GPU may have degraded (dried-out paste), reducing cooling efficiency. Radiators, heatsinks, fans may contain dust, clogging, worn bearings.

  • PSU degradation — Capacitors in PSUs age, especially under high heat and load. A reused PSU may no longer provide stable voltage under peak loads.

  • SSD wear — The SSD has a finite number of write cycles (TBW). A used SSD already has some wear; check SMART data (percentage used, reallocated sectors, etc.).

  • Motherboard wear — Socket pins, DIMM slots, PCIe slots might have mechanical wear or slight damage from prior installations. Capacitors and VRMs may have experienced thermal stress over time.

  • GPU wear — The GPU may have been run hard, with high temperatures, possibly overclocked in prior use. Fan bearings or thermal pads may have aged or become less effective.

  • Firmware / BIOS state — The board’s BIOS version may be outdated; compatibility with the Ryzen 5 5500 (or CPU family) might require updating. Some updates require a compatible older CPU to flash.

Compatibility / Limitations

  • The X370 Taichi is an older board; to support newer Ryzen 5 5500 (a newer generation), you might need a BIOS that includes microcode / support for that CPU. If the BIOS hasn’t been updated, the system may not boot until updated.

  • The board supports PCIe 3.0; you won’t get PCIe 4.0 or beyond, so newer GPUs or SSDs won’t see maximum theoretical throughput.

  • The 500 W PSU is just on the margin for this system; any inefficiencies, aging, or spikes may push it too close to its limit.


Expected Performance & Use-Case (Assuming It’s in Good Condition)

Assuming the refurbisher did a proper job (component testing, cleaning, thermal paste refresh, etc.), here’s what performance you might expect:

Use Case What to Expect
1080p Gaming (High/Ultra) Excellent. Most modern titles can run in high/ultra with good frame rates (≥ 100 FPS in many non-extreme settings).
1440p Gaming Strong. Many games will require some settings tuning, but you should be able to achieve good frame rates, especially with DLSS or lower ray tracing settings.
4K Gaming More limited. You’ll likely need to lower settings; the GPU is not best-suited for high settings at 4K.
Content creation / editing / rendering Decent. 6 cores helps in many tasks; for moderate video editing, 3D tasks, etc. For very heavy rendering, multiple cores or higher-end CPUs might pull ahead.
Multitasking, productivity Smooth. 16 GB RAM is okay (but not huge margin). You’ll be able to run web, development, creative apps.
Longevity Because it’s used, life expectancy might be somewhat reduced compared to brand-new system, especially for PSU / GPU. But with good maintenance and moderate use, it could still last several years

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