- Joined
- Jun 24, 2015
- Messages
- 8,219 (2.34/day)
- Location
- Western Canada
System Name | ab┃ob |
---|---|
Processor | 7800X3D┃5800X3D |
Motherboard | B650E PG-ITX┃X570 Impact |
Cooling | NH-U12A + T30┃AXP120-x67 |
Memory | 64GB 6400CL32┃32GB 3600CL14 |
Video Card(s) | RTX 4070 Ti Eagle┃RTX A2000 |
Storage | 8TB of SSDs┃1TB SN550 |
Case | Caselabs S3┃Lazer3D HT5 |
Memory seems to be holding up at 3600 ( only 2fps in it anyways ), finally got around in trying it. I will just run them at spec. Just wanted to let @theoneandonlymrk know how they are running.
According to Thaiphoon Burner the chips are CJR
Is this 4.2GHz all-core 1.22V just something you've cobbled together for benchmarking, or is it something you run daily?
If the latter is the case, no amount of fast RAM will help the fact you're losing a chunk of single- and lightly-threaded boost. I've not seen a single 3900X that doesn't boost up to at least 4.4GHz on light loads when it's allowed to do its thing.
It's common to come to Ryzen 3000 from something more traditional and go straight to all-core OC either in pursuit of multithreaded e-peen or out of fear from seeing the misleading 1.5V idle, but these chips are far smarter regarding performance, thermals and voltage than they make visible to us. If you want to reap the performance benefits in gaming, you need to let it boost.
Despite the rocky road in the first few months regarding Windows' scheduler and the fact that my 3700X has the absolute worst distribution of best cores you can get (core 0-1-2 are the worst, core 5 and 7 are the best), all my games load the correct cores and boost up close to 4.4GHz on them.
Yes, as part of its design, all-core frequencies will fall to 4.0-4.1GHz without PBO, but I have yet to come across any game that applies all-core 100% load.