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- Joined
- 18 Mar 2003
- Posts
- 1,129
Going for a Coffee Lake purchase next month so I was looking to see how much this current 6700K rig has depreciated. It seems it has not at all. The CPU, RAM, SSDs, Motherboard have all gone up in price since January 2016.
I can understand RAM prices often go up in peaks, and wasn't there a flood that caused a run on hard disks a few years ago? But why would CPUs that are not just one but two generations old hold up in price?
The 6700K was purchased in Jan 2016 for £295. It's now on sale for £350. How can this happen when since then there has been Skylake-X, Kaby Lake, Ryzen and Coffee Lake is due next week.
This is just crazy. Prices are supposed to depreciate not appreciate. I don't think I have ever seen anything like this in 30 years.
I can understand RAM prices often go up in peaks, and wasn't there a flood that caused a run on hard disks a few years ago? But why would CPUs that are not just one but two generations old hold up in price?
The 6700K was purchased in Jan 2016 for £295. It's now on sale for £350. How can this happen when since then there has been Skylake-X, Kaby Lake, Ryzen and Coffee Lake is due next week.
Code:
Item Then Today
-------------------------------------------
6700K £295 £350
GA-Z170XP-SLI £99 £104 (cheapest Z170)
950 PRO 256GB £148 £170 (EOL)
850 Evo 250GB £67 £87
LPX 8GB 3000MHz C15 £48 £86
-------------------------------------------
Totals £657 £797
This is just crazy. Prices are supposed to depreciate not appreciate. I don't think I have ever seen anything like this in 30 years.