The Ryzen 5 1600 is the second most powerful CPU in the Ryzen 5 family, behind the 1600X. On paper, the speed gap is quite wide: its 3.2GHz base and 3.6GHz Precision Boost frequencies are 400MHz slower than those of the Ryzen 5 1600X, and XFR only pushes this up to 3.65GHz, compared to the 1600X’s 4.1GHz. Otherwise, though, the two are largely identical, offering six cores (12 threads) and 16MB of L3 cache.
As you’d expect, the 1600 lagged slightly behind the X-edition CPU in every one of our benchmarks. The 1600’s lowly clock speed also left it behind the Intel CPUs, and AMD’s own 1500X, in our image-editing and game tests. The multithreaded tests, however, allowed the six-core design to show its power, outstripping the Core i5-7600K and…
