Tatty_Two
Gone Fishing
- Joined
- Jan 18, 2006
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- Worcestershire, UK
Processor | Intel Core i9 11900KF @ -.080mV PL max @220w |
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Motherboard | MSI MAG Z490 TOMAHAWK |
Cooling | DeepCool LS520SE Liquid + 3 Phanteks 140mm case fans |
Memory | 32GB (4 x 8GB SR) Patriot Viper Steel Bdie @ 3600Mhz CL14 1.45v Gear 1 |
Video Card(s) | Asus Dual RTX 4070 OC + 8% PL |
Storage | WD Blue SN550 1TB M.2 NVME//Crucial MX500 500GB SSD (OS) |
Display(s) | AOC Q2781PQ 27 inch Ultra Slim 2560 x 1440 IPS |
Case | Phanteks Enthoo Pro M Windowed - Gunmetal |
Audio Device(s) | Onboard Realtek ALC1200/SPDIF to Sony AVR @ 5.1 |
Power Supply | Seasonic CORE GM650w Gold Semi modular |
Software | Win 11 Home x64 |
in that link he says benchmarks were completed at default values. no overclock. just after he says what he reached overclocking. I think that is very misleading. of course the ryzen chip did badly. remember we found that by using faster memory and increased the infinity fabric speed and gaming performance beat all of intels chips in 80percent of games...i'll come back and post a link when I come across the source again. I remember the intel chips also benefitting up to 3200mhz and then it levelled out. the amd system carried on increasing in performance. I'm not bothered if my maximum frames are lowered. as long as the minimum frames are high I'm fine with it. although I am using a titan.
quote
The new power plan gives almost identical performance to the High Performance plan, but when the machine is idle, it offers some, if not all, of the power saving that the Balanced setting provides.
AMD should also be addressing some problems on its side. Ryzen shows a significant dependence on the speed of its memory. Faster memory obviously means that there is more bandwidth, but there's a less obvious advantage on Zen chips: internally, the chip is organised as two blocks of four cores, and the communication between these blocks of four cores runs at the memory clock speed. Make the memory clock faster by going from, say, 2400MHz RAM (on a 1200MHz clock) to 3200MHz RAM (on a 1600MHz clock) and not only does the memory bandwidth go up by fifty percent, but so too does the bandwidth between the two blocks of cores.
That appears to be quite the opposite of W1z's dedicated Ryzen memory speed review where it showed minimal gains in gaming...........................
https://www.techpowerup.com/reviews/AMD/Ryzen_Memory_Analysis/9.html
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