- Joined
- Jun 20, 2007
- Messages
- 3,942 (0.62/day)
System Name | Widow |
---|---|
Processor | Ryzen 7600x |
Motherboard | AsRock B650 HDVM.2 |
Cooling | CPU : Corsair Hydro XC7 }{ GPU: EK FC 1080 via Magicool 360 III PRO > Photon 170 (D5) |
Memory | 32GB Gskill Flare X5 |
Video Card(s) | GTX 1080 TI |
Storage | Samsung 9series NVM 2TB and Rust |
Display(s) | Predator X34P/Tempest X270OC @ 120hz / LG W3000h |
Case | Fractal Define S [Antec Skeleton hanging in hall of fame] |
Audio Device(s) | Asus Xonar Xense with AKG K612 cans on Monacor SA-100 |
Power Supply | Seasonic X-850 |
Mouse | Razer Naga 2014 |
Software | Windows 11 Pro |
Benchmark Scores | FFXIV ARR Benchmark 12,883 on i7 2600k 15,098 on AM5 7600x |
As per system specs that is in fact my current setup ..still
I am acutely aware that CPUs, particularly at 1440p and higher are not something you purchase every year - as the architecture changes are not frequent.
Additionally performance is often marginal and worse, the power draw TDP tends to keep rising
As a result, from a gaming perspective, good CPUs can often be 'competitive' for years
Where I do find that you start to experience draw backs are within the other associated components such as motherboard, memory, storage devices etc.
Often though the biggest upgrade persons experience comes from the GPU. What bothers me about continuously updating the GPU and not the underlying platform is it's similar to putting a super charger on an engine and not improving other components. This is reducing the potential performance of the super charger
I feel it's appropriate to finally look at upgrading the platform for this computer, however knowing where to start is difficult - given that as aforementioned CPU changes don't often bring much in terms of grunt output
Though the rub comes in as mentioned before about the GPU. I am not naive to think that a new CPU and motherboard setup is going to bring the same frame rate jump as a new GPU, though it seems I have to get this done at some point as well as if nothing else, to ensure I am getting full value for the GPU
If budget only allowed a GPU upgrade or a platform upgrade but not both, do I continue down the path of the GPU on top of a weak platform, or finally update th platform and wait on the GPU?
For my requirements :
Other considerations: I don't stream, nor do large file transfer frequently however I have notied that my system has a bit of higher than desired latency when doing file transfers or internet downloads/torrents
Particularly when I get past a certain speed on my torrent download, the computer struggles noticeably, with pauses every few seconds until the download ends
In summary, am I better off finally updating teh platform and keeping my 1080TI, or jumping up a GPU
If I do it's likely a 4070 TI. It draws similar power and while I never cared about that before, I think I want to stay keeping it under 300 watts this time around
(I also have to consider that I won't be able to acquire a waterblock for a new GPu for a time, therefore something cool and capable out of the box is desirable)
As for Intel vs AMD I am not fussed
Budget (depends on what I choose, platform or GPU. For the former £500sh, for the latter £600-700sh)
Recommendations welcome
Thank you
I am acutely aware that CPUs, particularly at 1440p and higher are not something you purchase every year - as the architecture changes are not frequent.
Additionally performance is often marginal and worse, the power draw TDP tends to keep rising
As a result, from a gaming perspective, good CPUs can often be 'competitive' for years
Where I do find that you start to experience draw backs are within the other associated components such as motherboard, memory, storage devices etc.
Often though the biggest upgrade persons experience comes from the GPU. What bothers me about continuously updating the GPU and not the underlying platform is it's similar to putting a super charger on an engine and not improving other components. This is reducing the potential performance of the super charger
I feel it's appropriate to finally look at upgrading the platform for this computer, however knowing where to start is difficult - given that as aforementioned CPU changes don't often bring much in terms of grunt output
Though the rub comes in as mentioned before about the GPU. I am not naive to think that a new CPU and motherboard setup is going to bring the same frame rate jump as a new GPU, though it seems I have to get this done at some point as well as if nothing else, to ensure I am getting full value for the GPU
If budget only allowed a GPU upgrade or a platform upgrade but not both, do I continue down the path of the GPU on top of a weak platform, or finally update th platform and wait on the GPU?
For my requirements :
- Day to day use
- Gaming
- Some video watching (movies)
Other considerations: I don't stream, nor do large file transfer frequently however I have notied that my system has a bit of higher than desired latency when doing file transfers or internet downloads/torrents
Particularly when I get past a certain speed on my torrent download, the computer struggles noticeably, with pauses every few seconds until the download ends
In summary, am I better off finally updating teh platform and keeping my 1080TI, or jumping up a GPU
If I do it's likely a 4070 TI. It draws similar power and while I never cared about that before, I think I want to stay keeping it under 300 watts this time around
(I also have to consider that I won't be able to acquire a waterblock for a new GPu for a time, therefore something cool and capable out of the box is desirable)
As for Intel vs AMD I am not fussed
Budget (depends on what I choose, platform or GPU. For the former £500sh, for the latter £600-700sh)
Recommendations welcome
Thank you