- Joined
- Sep 10, 2018
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- 6,966 (3.03/day)
- Location
- California
System Name | His & Hers |
---|---|
Processor | R7 5800X/ R7 7950X3D Stock |
Motherboard | X670E Aorus Pro X/ROG Crosshair VIII Hero |
Cooling | Corsair h150 elite/ Corsair h115i Platinum |
Memory | Trident Z5 Neo 6000/ 32 GB 3200 CL14 @3800 CL16 Team T Force Nighthawk |
Video Card(s) | Evga FTW 3 Ultra 3080ti/ Gigabyte Gaming OC 4090 |
Storage | lots of SSD. |
Display(s) | A whole bunch OLED, VA, IPS..... |
Case | 011 Dynamic XL/ Phanteks Evolv X |
Audio Device(s) | Arctis Pro + gaming Dac/ Corsair sp 2500/ Logitech G560/Samsung Q990B |
Power Supply | Seasonic Ultra Prime Titanium 1000w/850w |
Mouse | Logitech G502 Lightspeed/ Logitech G Pro Hero. |
Keyboard | Logitech - G915 LIGHTSPEED / Logitech G Pro |
der8auer got 8800 MT working without going to gear 4. Some interesting performance results there when compared against lowest common denominator testing at 6000 MT, same RAM kit between rigs. Zen 4/5 have to run out of sync to get 8000 MT, due to that, generally offers no gaming benefit.
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Definitely seems like some strange behaviour, depending on game. These 1% lows are crazy low, considering P cores have more dedicated cache, buffering memory. I suspect it's early BIOS/software shenanigans. Looking forward to W1z's memory scaling articles, and later testing with more mature platform software and Win updates.
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It's still unfortunate that after intel watched amd release a seemingly half baked cpu in need of both windows and bios updates they decided to do the same thing on a more expensive platform that also loses in gaming overall vs it's outgoing one....