- Joined
- Jan 29, 2012
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- 6,881 (1.47/day)
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- Florida
System Name | natr0n-PC |
---|---|
Processor | Ryzen 5950x-5600x | 9600k |
Motherboard | B450 AORUS M | Z390 UD |
Cooling | EK AIO 360 - 6 fan action | AIO |
Memory | Patriot - Viper Steel DDR4 (B-Die)(4x8GB) | Samsung DDR4 (4x8GB) |
Video Card(s) | EVGA 3070ti FTW |
Storage | Various |
Display(s) | Pixio PX279 Prime |
Case | Thermaltake Level 20 VT | Black bench |
Audio Device(s) | LOXJIE D10 + Kinter Amp + 6 Bookshelf Speakers Sony+JVC+Sony |
Power Supply | Super Flower Leadex III ARGB 80+ Gold 650W | EVGA 700 Gold |
Software | XP/7/8.1/10 |
Benchmark Scores | http://valid.x86.fr/79kuh6 |
That doesn't seem right. I think what will happen is if you only use four, two per CPU that each CPU drops to dual channel mode. I'd use 6 of them as well, 3 for each CPU and call it good.
Running dual CPU's isn't what it once was. As long as your CPU's match and the ram modules match, you're good to go. For gaming, you'll get diminishing returns on some games, depending on the game, and amazing results for others. But multi-tasking or audio/video rendering, it's going to scream.
I got a matched pair and all the ram are identical. For games I lock/limit my fps to 60 usually with my 7970. As long as it can maintain that I got no worries.