- Joined
- Nov 30, 2021
- Messages
- 48 (0.04/day)
- Location
- Canada
System Name | HEDT X299 |
---|---|
Processor | Intel i9-10980xe |
Motherboard | Asus Prime X299 Edition 30 |
Cooling | Noctua NH-D15S |
Memory | Corsair Vengeance Pro 64GB DDR4 (8 X 8GB) |
Video Card(s) | Nvidia RTX a4000 (16GB) |
Storage | 6 X Samsung 970 EVO Plus 1TB NVMe |
Display(s) | 24” Lenovo FHD |
Case | Lian Li |
Audio Device(s) | Onboard |
Power Supply | Corsair RM 750x |
Software | Windows 11 Pro |
Benchmark Scores | Cinebench R24. 1350 Cinebench R23 25748 Cinebench R20 10017 |
Here's my take from an owner of a Broadwell-E system i7-6950X, I'd buy a 6950X (again) and overclock the hell out of it. Hopefully you have a good X99 motherboard with the latest Bios to do so, install a Noctua NH D15S CPU air-cooler, and an NVME 512GB boot drive. With turbo boost you should be able to overclock (to the extreme) select individual cores (from within your bios settings) up to 4 cores of the 10 cores available, I think. Some newer 4 X 8GB sticks DDR4 3600Mhz Corsair Vengeance memory also helps to achieve a significant improvement of the CPU overclock.
Your i7-5820K is really no better than an i7 3960X (top of the Sandy Bridge-E hierarchy). A move from the i7-5960X, top of the Haswell-E, (you have the lowest of the Haswell-E) to the i7-6950X (top of the Broadwell-E) gives two more cores at the same frequency, a 3 to 5 ipc improvement, giving about 25% more performance. So likely a 40% improvement from your i7-5820k before overclocking.
I believe that the top overclocked Broadwell-E on a good X99 system could support an RTX4080 or the up and coming RTX4070ti quite handily at 1440p without bottlenecking. These upgrades listed along with quad channel memory will provide quite a versatile HEDT suitable for gaming, machine learning, deep learning, and scientific processing tasks. The only caveat is that a used i7-6950X still commands a hefty price on eBay, somewhere around 400-500 USD, and 1000+ NIB. Baring these upgrades, you may as well buy a whole new system, preferably i7-13700k with a Z790 motherboard and DDR5 memory, which would likely keep you satisfied for 4 or 5 years.
Resizable Bar requires 10th generation or later Intel CPU's
FWIW good luck.
Your i7-5820K is really no better than an i7 3960X (top of the Sandy Bridge-E hierarchy). A move from the i7-5960X, top of the Haswell-E, (you have the lowest of the Haswell-E) to the i7-6950X (top of the Broadwell-E) gives two more cores at the same frequency, a 3 to 5 ipc improvement, giving about 25% more performance. So likely a 40% improvement from your i7-5820k before overclocking.
I believe that the top overclocked Broadwell-E on a good X99 system could support an RTX4080 or the up and coming RTX4070ti quite handily at 1440p without bottlenecking. These upgrades listed along with quad channel memory will provide quite a versatile HEDT suitable for gaming, machine learning, deep learning, and scientific processing tasks. The only caveat is that a used i7-6950X still commands a hefty price on eBay, somewhere around 400-500 USD, and 1000+ NIB. Baring these upgrades, you may as well buy a whole new system, preferably i7-13700k with a Z790 motherboard and DDR5 memory, which would likely keep you satisfied for 4 or 5 years.
Resizable Bar requires 10th generation or later Intel CPU's
FWIW good luck.
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