- Joined
- May 3, 2018
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- 75 (0.03/day)
The 3950X system I have is still what I consider to be my experimental system. I might go live with it and use it as my main system on my birthday next month.I'm not into pain anymore.
I just sold my i7-8700K system to my next-door neighbor.
That one was tweaked in many ways.
I de-lidded it and had very low temps with it. All cores were running at 4.972GHz.
I had SLI GTX-1080-FE GPUs in it and 32GB of DDR4-3200 MHz. RAM installed.
It seemed like I was always looking for a way to tweak it to get a faster benchmark score out of it.
Then, someone sold me an i9-9900k CPU and board.
I knew that it was a PITA to de-lid this one, so I got a good 280mm AIO for it.
I got 32GB of 4133MHz. RAM for it.
I got two 1TB Crucial Gumstick drives for it to run in a RAID configuration.
For DATA, there is a pair of 5TB Toshiba X-300 SATA drives in RAID configuration.
I put it all together in a high-airflow chassis with five 140mm Cougar Vortex fans. They move a shit-ton of air.
The SLI GTX-1080-FE GPUs moved over to this PC.
I went into the BIOS (ASUS ROG Strix Z-390-E Gaming) and set the RAID up. I set the Intel XMP (Extreme Memory Profile) to XMP-one.
I was ready,
Let the tweaking begin!
I started trying to OC the CPU.
No Joy.
no matter what I did to tweak the CPU, it failed to boot. After a few days of screwing around with it, I set the XMP-1 memory profile and left the CPU on stock settings.
It booted and ran fine. It also scored significantly higher in benches than the 8700K ever did.
I looked and found that it was boosting to over 5GHz. speeds. (not sure how many cores though)
Thinking about it, I decided to just leave it alone to do its own thing. It works, and I'm happy with it.
I'll probably set the Ryzen box up to do its own thing at first and see how it does.
I don't want to constantly massage my PS anymore. I want to just do some gaming with them.
Currently my main machine is an i7-4790K, which I have also delidded and used Thermal Grizzly Conductonaut liquid metal to replace the rubber that Intel laughingly calls TIM. It has been running with a mild overclock of 4.4 GHz on all cores since I first got it and in total the system has been up and running for more than 1,750 days 24/7 (4.8 years).
A couple of years ago there wasn't anything to spend my money on in the way of upgrading to a new system, so I decided to give the 4790K a new home.
Delidding made a lot of difference and here are the temps running AIDA Extreme on it:
The thing is that if you were sold an i9-9900K after Intel brought out the i9-9900KS then you're shit out of luck trying to OC it. The i9-9900KS was essentially Intel binning out the chips which would normally have been an i9-9900K that could be overclocked to 5 GHz (rumour has it that the "KS" in the CPU name stands for "Keep Spending").
If you do get a Ryzen system and keep your RAM then I would strongly suggest that you downclock the RAM to 3733 otherwise the Infinity Fabric will run at half of of what it should. At 3733 the Infinity Fabric would run at 1867 MHz; however above that the Infinity Fabric runs at Data Rate/2 which means that at 4133 your Infinity Fabric would run at 1033 MHz
Except of course that the i9-9900K is soldered.@mtcn77
for anyone that put more than one machine together and can read a manual,
should not have any probs using LM.
even when i didnt care to do more than apply it (not removing it after couple of month and replacing it a few times to "saturate" block/HS),
twisting the block removed it without trouble from the cpu after being installed for +1y.
and using it for now +6y, showed me the "gap" between a quality (cooler) base and the cpu HS is a lot less
than what i would need from even the thinnest coat of ("normal") TP i could apply.
and it was easier to cover all of the HS evenly, when a (greasy/oily) TP was previously installed,
which always gives me a hard time applying new/different TP.
@Michael Nager
yet here i am, running aorus ultra with xmp loaded in bios, even managed to lower the timings from stock 18-22-22-42
(to 16-19-19-36/1, haven't tried more) at the same V, and on "crappy" micron E die.
no ram retraining happening.
That makes the prospect of delidding it not so attractive and as Der8auer has shown, the results even after delidding and lapping the CPU die are really not worth it.
I am running the Team Group Edition 3600 16-16-16-36 OC'd to 3733 with the same primary timings.
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