- Joined
- Jul 24, 2024
- Messages
- 215 (1.81/day)
System Name | AM4_TimeKiller |
---|---|
Processor | AMD Ryzen 5 5600X @ all-core 4.7 GHz |
Motherboard | ASUS ROG Strix B550-E Gaming |
Cooling | Arctic Freezer II 420 rev.7 (push-pull) |
Memory | G.Skill TridentZ RGB, 2x16 GB DDR4, B-Die, 3800 MHz @ CL14-15-14-29-43 1T, 53.2 ns |
Video Card(s) | ASRock Radeon RX 7800 XT Phantom Gaming |
Storage | Samsung 990 PRO 1 TB, Kingston KC3000 1 TB, Kingston KC3000 2 TB |
Case | Corsair 7000D Airflow |
Audio Device(s) | Creative Sound Blaster X-Fi Titanium |
Power Supply | Seasonic Prime TX-850 |
Mouse | Logitech wireless mouse |
Keyboard | Logitech wireless keyboard |
I'd definitely pay $100 extra and go for 9600X instead of 7600X just to have my PC quieter and cooler for upcoming 3 years. Lower power draw = lower temps = less noise. The difference between 65°C and 85°C in terms of PWM fan control is enormous. For instance, my currect profile is set to spin fans at 10% PWM while CPU temp is being lower than 50°C, then raises proportionaly to 30% PWM until 68°C. Temps average during gaming at around 62-64°C, that's around 380-410 RPM, almost inaudible. I've never seen my CPU go beyond 73°C. I can't imagine that noise with 85°C and even beyond. It would take at least 70-80% PWM (1200-1300 RPM) to prevent temps from raising further. (Numbers presented apply to my fans.)And all of this is worth $100 to you? A 50% higher price?
You want to spend extra $100 in order not to buy a robust cooler (a $35 Peerless Assassin is very robust, indeed). You actually need to buy a cooler for the 9600X, while the 7600 has one included (it will be loud, but it's free).
You want to spend extra $100 to have 20% better efficiency? It's not even true. The 7600 literally has better gaming efficiency, and in Cinebench the 9600X only wins by 10%. How many years will it take to save that $100 in energy costs?
But you get 5% more gaming performance and 11% productivity over the 7600? Wow, for $100 more, very impressive indeed.
I like it quiet. Shush!
That reference to Ryzen 3600 was a kind of joke. But according to TPU it is the best bang for the buck right now.I have no idea where your logic comes from. Why not the 3600? Because the 9600X is 53% faster than the 3600. And the 7600 is 46% faster than the 3600. And the 3600 is on an old platform with inferior features (PCI-E, NVMe, USB). You're paying more, but you're getting a lot more. With the 9600X you literally get nothing over the 7600. Irrelevant improvement in efficiency and performance at a 50% higher price.
Everyone has this line of when it starts to matter defined differently.An RTX 4090 has terrible performance per dollar, but it doesn't matter. Why? Because it's 33% faster than the next card in the line-up. If the 9600X offered 33% more performance at a 50% higher price, nobody would be complaining.