- Joined
- Nov 13, 2007
- Messages
- 10,323 (1.69/day)
- Location
- Austin Texas
Processor | 13700KF Undervolted @ 5.6/ 5.5, 4.8Ghz Ring 200W PL1 |
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Motherboard | MSI 690-I PRO |
Cooling | Thermalright Peerless Assassin 120 w/ Arctic P12 Fans |
Memory | 48 GB DDR5 7600 MHZ CL36 |
Video Card(s) | RTX 4090 FE |
Storage | 2x 2TB WDC SN850, 1TB Samsung 960 prr |
Display(s) | Alienware 32" 4k 240hz OLED |
Case | SLIGER S620 |
Audio Device(s) | Yes |
Power Supply | Corsair SF750 |
Mouse | Xlite V2 |
Keyboard | RoyalAxe |
Software | Windows 11 |
Benchmark Scores | They're pretty good, nothing crazy. |
Maybe innovation and competition are finally returning to the CPU market.
I think that happened with the initial Ryzen launch... we had quad cores as the high end for 5 years up until about 12 months ago...
CPUs are hot right now... this is a great launch with these initial benches... i think the 2700x will really be an amazing chip.
I've been very pleased with my 1500X @ 3.9, planning to build a 2800X opensuse Tumbleweed box, and I'd be happy with 4.0 on all cores if I can get that. 4.2+ would be icing on the cake, but I don't think I'm really going to notice a difference.
On ryzen you really do notice that extra 200Mhz - the architecture scales really well with clock speed. I think a 4.4Ghz 2700x would be able to match my 4.7Ghz 7820x in cinebench multi... probably at less power consumption.
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