- Joined
- Jul 10, 2018
- Messages
- 253 (0.11/day)
Well, that's Pat G on suicide watch
Processor | AMD Ryzen 5900X |
---|---|
Motherboard | MSI MAG X570 Tomahawk |
Cooling | Dual custom loops |
Memory | 4x8GB G.SKILL Trident Z Neo 3200C14 B-Die |
Video Card(s) | AMD Radeon RX 6800XT Reference |
Storage | ADATA SX8200 480GB, Inland Premium 2TB, various HDDs |
Display(s) | MSI MAG341CQ |
Case | Meshify 2 XL |
Audio Device(s) | Schiit Fulla 3 |
Power Supply | Super Flower Leadex Titanium SE 1000W |
Mouse | Glorious Model D |
Keyboard | Drop CTRL, lubed and filmed Halo Trues |
Conclusion paragraph of the review you took a chart from.
Processor | Intel Core i5-4690 |
---|---|
Motherboard | MSI H97 PC Mate |
Video Card(s) | PowerColor Red Devil RX 480 8GB |
Case | be quiet! Silent Base 800 Orange Window |
My guess is that he got drunk, like many in this forum.Conclusion paragraph of the review you took a chart from.
Processor | Ryzen 7 5700X |
---|---|
Motherboard | ASUS TUF Gaming X570-PRO (WiFi 6) |
Cooling | Noctua NH-C14S (two fans) |
Memory | 2x16GB DDR4 3200 |
Video Card(s) | Reference Vega 64 |
Storage | Intel 665p 1TB, WD Black SN850X 2TB, Crucial MX300 1TB SATA, Samsung 830 256 GB SATA |
Display(s) | Nixeus NX-EDG27, and Samsung S23A700 |
Case | Fractal Design R5 |
Power Supply | Seasonic PRIME TITANIUM 850W |
Mouse | Logitech |
VR HMD | Oculus Rift |
Software | Windows 11 Pro, and Ubuntu 20.04 |
For me, the real sticking point is the low uplift for most multithreaded applications. I was expecting the scaling that we see in Blender, but for many, we get either no improvement or regressions, e.g. in file compression.Yeah, everything this cpu is good at can be done better on a gpu.....
This does feel like Zen2 though decent application performance but meh gaming uplifts.
It preforms like a 7950x in w1z applications and gaming benchmark aggregate I fail to see how that is impressive after 2 years.... we are talking a couple percent better if we don't cheery pick what each is good at.....
Same problem the 9950X had really.
It's not the same. Zen 2 3950X was nearly 2x the rendering performance of the competition (9900K) at the same power.Where'd all the people from the Zen 2 days who only cared about rendering/encoding speed and power efficiency go??
Processor | AMD Ryzen 5900X |
---|---|
Motherboard | MSI MAG X570 Tomahawk |
Cooling | Dual custom loops |
Memory | 4x8GB G.SKILL Trident Z Neo 3200C14 B-Die |
Video Card(s) | AMD Radeon RX 6800XT Reference |
Storage | ADATA SX8200 480GB, Inland Premium 2TB, various HDDs |
Display(s) | MSI MAG341CQ |
Case | Meshify 2 XL |
Audio Device(s) | Schiit Fulla 3 |
Power Supply | Super Flower Leadex Titanium SE 1000W |
Mouse | Glorious Model D |
Keyboard | Drop CTRL, lubed and filmed Halo Trues |
For me, the real sticking point is the low uplift for most multithreaded applications. I was expecting the scaling that we see in Blender, but for many, we get either no improvement or regressions, e.g. in file compression.
View attachment 368779
View attachment 368778
Tested what exactly?CUDIMMs should be compatible with Raptor Lake as well, and should similarly raise the clock frequency ceiling. Probably won't go as high as Arrow, but I think chances are good. Do you know if anyone tested it, now that some reviewers have a kit in their hands?
I don't think any regular Z890 boards will be doing 8000-8200MT on standard memory (without a clock driver) other than the Z890 Apex and its usual counterparts, though
Processor | Core i7 5820k |
---|---|
Motherboard | MSI x99s Mpower |
Cooling | Zalman Reserator 1, XSPC RX120, Koolance QDCs, Koolance MVR-40, EK Supreme HF, EK vga supreme HF |
Memory | 4x8GB crucial 3000MHz |
Video Card(s) | R9 290x 4GB with EK fullcover waterblock. |
Storage | Intel SSD 330 180GB, Samsung HD103UJ 1TB, Seagate ST31500341AS 1,5TB, Seagate ST4000DM000 4TB |
Display(s) | HP LP3065 30" |
Case | Silverstone Fortress FT02B |
Audio Device(s) | ATI HDMI audio device -> Yamaha RX-V1600 |
Power Supply | Corsair AX860 80plus platinum |
Software | Windows 8.1 prof. x64 eng retail. |
System Name | "Icy Resurrection" |
---|---|
Processor | 13th Gen Intel Core i9-13900KS Special Edition |
Motherboard | ASUS ROG Maximus Z790 Apex Encore |
Cooling | Noctua NH-D15S upgraded with 2x NF-F12 iPPC-3000 fans and Honeywell PTM7950 TIM |
Memory | 32 GB G.SKILL Trident Z5 RGB F5-6800J3445G16GX2-TZ5RK @ 7600 MT/s 36-44-44-52-96 1.4V |
Video Card(s) | ASUS ROG Strix GeForce RTX™ 4080 16GB GDDR6X White OC Edition |
Storage | 500 GB WD Black SN750 SE NVMe SSD + 4 TB WD Red Plus WD40EFPX HDD |
Display(s) | 55-inch LG G3 OLED |
Case | Pichau Mancer CV500 White Edition |
Audio Device(s) | Apple USB-C + Sony MDR-V7 headphones |
Power Supply | EVGA 1300 G2 1.3kW 80+ Gold |
Mouse | Microsoft Classic Intellimouse |
Keyboard | IBM Model M type 1391405 (distribución española) |
Software | Windows 11 IoT Enterprise LTSC 24H2 |
Benchmark Scores | I pulled a Qiqi~ |
Tested what exactly?
They should be, but will those platforms get BIOS updates?
Dubious.
Processor | Ryzen 7 5700X |
---|---|
Motherboard | ASUS TUF Gaming X570-PRO (WiFi 6) |
Cooling | Noctua NH-C14S (two fans) |
Memory | 2x16GB DDR4 3200 |
Video Card(s) | Reference Vega 64 |
Storage | Intel 665p 1TB, WD Black SN850X 2TB, Crucial MX300 1TB SATA, Samsung 830 256 GB SATA |
Display(s) | Nixeus NX-EDG27, and Samsung S23A700 |
Case | Fractal Design R5 |
Power Supply | Seasonic PRIME TITANIUM 850W |
Mouse | Logitech |
VR HMD | Oculus Rift |
Software | Windows 11 Pro, and Ubuntu 20.04 |
That's a good point. However, even other applications don't scale as well as they should. Take NAMD which should scale pretty well because of the doubled vector throughput of the new E cores, but the uplift is relatively meager.No SMT and compression loves thread count.
Processor | AMD Ryzen 9 7945HX and AMD Ryzen 7 7800X3D |
---|---|
Motherboard | MSI MAG MORTAR B650M WIFI |
Cooling | DeepCool AG400 PLUS |
Video Card(s) | NVIDIA GeForce RTX 4090 Laptop GPU and AMD Radeon RX 7900XTX |
Display(s) | Samsung Odyssey Neo G8 |
Case | ASUS ProArt PA602 |
Audio Device(s) | EDIFIER R1700BT |
Power Supply | EVGA SuperNOVA 850 G5 |
Mouse | ROG KERIS WIRELESS AIMPOINT |
Keyboard | ROG CLAYMORE II |
System Name | New AMD Build |
---|---|
Processor | Ryzen 7 9700X |
Motherboard | ASUS ROG Strix X870-F Gaming WIFI |
Cooling | Cooler Master Liquid 360 Atmos |
Memory | G.Skill Trident Z5 Neo RGB DDR5-6000 CL30-40-40-96 1.40V 64GB (2x32GB) - EXPO |
Video Card(s) | ASUS TUF Gaming GeForce RTX 4080 SUPER |
Storage | 2x Samsung 2TB 990 Pro NVMe M.2 SSD |
Display(s) | Samsung Odyssey OLED G8/G80SD 32" 4K 240Hz |
Case | Corsair 5000D Airflow Tempered Glass Mid-Tower ATX |
Power Supply | Corsair HX1000i Fully Modular Ultra-Low Noise Platinum ATX 1000 Watt |
Software | Windows 11 Professional |
System Name | Budget Box |
---|---|
Processor | Xeon E5-2667v2 |
Motherboard | ASUS P9X79 Pro |
Cooling | Some cheap tower cooler, I dunno |
Memory | 32GB 1866-DDR3 ECC |
Video Card(s) | XFX RX 5600XT |
Storage | WD NVME 1GB |
Display(s) | ASUS Pro Art 27" |
Case | Antec P7 Neo |
Well, there’s multiple things going on at the same time. At one point, performance gains were made by increasing clocks and improving IPC, then we added more cores. Now, adding more cores is diminishing returns. Higher clocks are not only harder to reach, but they also have a diminishing return. 400 more MHz on a chip like this is only 5%. That leaves architectural improvements, but some of those gains are offset by patching flaws. Now throw in P+E, chiplets, tiles, Thread Directors, preferred cores, parked cores, Windows Schedulers, and all that, and today’s CPUs are just begging for regressions and disappointments. There’s just so many more ways for things to go wrong.The worrying thing for me is if silicon makers have finally hit a wall. Regardless of whether I want to upgrade or not I still love to see progress both AMD and Intel took 2 years to release new architectures which is much longer than past generation and seemingly only longer and longer between generation but both have very mixed performance and sub par gaming improvements to even regression.
I hate stagnation but the biggest current issues for both the 200 and 9000 series is pricing eventually both will be worth buying hopefully.
Perhaps some form of high-speed on package memory could supplement trips to the system RAM, like what Apple is doing with M-class SOCs? 8-16GB might help offset system costs, even if that means CPU prices go up some. That really seems like the future to me, where system RAM takes a step back for intensive workloads. Sure, eventually an app needs to hit system RAM, but perhaps the next major gain is to keep more tasks on-package. X3Ds do this already, and if they could clock as high as non-3DV chips, there would be no losses.@oxrufiioxo
Well, in terms of performance - probably not yet. But, as people mentioned already, the memory wall IS real. Zen 5 does suffer from inability to feed the cores fast enough. I am not sure how this can be overcome short of going to quad channel on desktop platforms and THAT would just drive the costs even higher, which I am not sure is what consumers want.
System Name | Best AMD Computer |
---|---|
Processor | AMD 7900X3D |
Motherboard | Asus X670E E Strix |
Cooling | In Win SR36 |
Memory | GSKILL DDR5 32GB 5200 30 |
Video Card(s) | Sapphire Pulse 7900XT (Watercooled) |
Storage | Corsair MP 700, Seagate 530 2Tb, Adata SX8200 2TBx2, Kingston 2 TBx2, Micron 8 TB, WD AN 1500 |
Display(s) | GIGABYTE FV43U |
Case | Corsair 7000D Airflow |
Audio Device(s) | Corsair Void Pro, Logitch Z523 5.1 |
Power Supply | Deepcool 1000M |
Mouse | Logitech g7 gaming mouse |
Keyboard | Logitech G510 |
Software | Windows 11 Pro 64 Steam. GOG, Uplay, Origin |
Benchmark Scores | Firestrike: 46183 Time Spy: 25121 |
Only good for Gaming? Are you not the one that bashed me because I did not get a 7950X3D because it was better at productivity? Anyone that has been on TPU for any length of time knows that you are very pro Intel though. This post is insane because these CPUs have nothing that stands out. Nothing. Power draw is still higher than AMD. Please don't even show X3D power draw there.The thing is, as usual, the X3D chips are only good for gaming. They're slower than the non X3D chips as well as the Intel competition in anything that isn't gaming, which happens to be what the vast majority of people in the world use CPUs for (not gaming). They're also more expensive.
Compare, say, a mainstream segment $330 9700X against the $310 245K, you're essentially getting 8% more application performance per dollar with the 245K, a more modern platform, and generally it's more efficient, while having slightly slower gaming prowess (with 6000 MT and early firmware). The 7800X3D is both more expensive and 10% slower in applications, but 20% faster in gaming (when the 245K is tested with slow memory), for $490.
What I'm seeing with the $590 285K is a CPU that compares favorably against its more expensive competition ($649 9950X), 30% more efficient in ST View attachment 368773
essentially the same in MT
View attachment 368772
25% less power in idle
View attachment 368774
...plus a better platform, but currently it's slightly slower in gaming despite being more efficient, when tested with memory 2000 MT slower than Intel's "sweetspot" 8000 MT.
View attachment 368775
System Name | Silent |
---|---|
Processor | Ryzen 7800X3D @ 5.15ghz BCLK OC, TG AM5 High Performance Heatspreader |
Motherboard | ASUS ROG Strix X670E-I, chipset fans replaced with Noctua A14x25 G2 |
Cooling | Optimus Block, HWLabs Copper 240/40 + 240/30, D5/Res, 4x Noctua A12x25, 1x A14G2, Mayhems Ultra Pure |
Memory | 32 GB Dominator Platinum 6150 MT 26-36-36-48, 56.6ns AIDA, 2050 FCLK, 160 ns tRFC, active cooled |
Video Card(s) | RTX 3080 Ti Founders Edition, Conductonaut Extreme, 18 W/mK MinusPad Extreme, Corsair XG7 Waterblock |
Storage | Intel Optane DC P1600X 118 GB, Samsung 990 Pro 2 TB |
Display(s) | 32" 240 Hz 1440p Samsung G7, 31.5" 165 Hz 1440p LG NanoIPS Ultragear, MX900 dual gas VESA mount |
Case | Sliger SM570 CNC Aluminium 13-Litre, 3D printed feet, custom front, LINKUP Ultra PCIe 4.0 x16 white |
Audio Device(s) | Audeze Maxwell Ultraviolet w/upgrade pads & LCD headband, Galaxy Buds 3 Pro, Razer Nommo Pro |
Power Supply | SF750 Plat, full transparent custom cables, Sentinel Pro 1500 Online Double Conversion UPS w/Noctua |
Mouse | Razer Viper V3 Pro 8 KHz Mercury White w/Tiger Ice Skates & Pulsar Supergrip tape, Razer Atlas |
Keyboard | Wooting 60HE+ module, TOFU-R CNC Alu/Brass, SS Prismcaps W+Jellykey, LekkerV2 mod, TLabs Leath/Suede |
Software | Windows 11 IoT Enterprise LTSC 24H2 |
Benchmark Scores | Legendary |
I can see you still have a certain level of wilful ignorance when presented with hard data.This post is insane because these CPUs have nothing that stands out. Nothing. Power draw is still higher than AMD.
System Name | "Icy Resurrection" |
---|---|
Processor | 13th Gen Intel Core i9-13900KS Special Edition |
Motherboard | ASUS ROG Maximus Z790 Apex Encore |
Cooling | Noctua NH-D15S upgraded with 2x NF-F12 iPPC-3000 fans and Honeywell PTM7950 TIM |
Memory | 32 GB G.SKILL Trident Z5 RGB F5-6800J3445G16GX2-TZ5RK @ 7600 MT/s 36-44-44-52-96 1.4V |
Video Card(s) | ASUS ROG Strix GeForce RTX™ 4080 16GB GDDR6X White OC Edition |
Storage | 500 GB WD Black SN750 SE NVMe SSD + 4 TB WD Red Plus WD40EFPX HDD |
Display(s) | 55-inch LG G3 OLED |
Case | Pichau Mancer CV500 White Edition |
Audio Device(s) | Apple USB-C + Sony MDR-V7 headphones |
Power Supply | EVGA 1300 G2 1.3kW 80+ Gold |
Mouse | Microsoft Classic Intellimouse |
Keyboard | IBM Model M type 1391405 (distribución española) |
Software | Windows 11 IoT Enterprise LTSC 24H2 |
Benchmark Scores | I pulled a Qiqi~ |
Only good for Gaming? Are you not the one that bashed me because I did not get a 7950X3D because it was better at productivity? Anyone that has been on TPU for any length of time knows that you are very pro Intel though. This post is insane because these CPUs have nothing that stands out. Nothing. Power draw is still higher than AMD. Please don't even show X3D power draw there.
Processor | Ryzen 7 5700X |
---|---|
Motherboard | ASUS TUF Gaming X570-PRO (WiFi 6) |
Cooling | Noctua NH-C14S (two fans) |
Memory | 2x16GB DDR4 3200 |
Video Card(s) | Reference Vega 64 |
Storage | Intel 665p 1TB, WD Black SN850X 2TB, Crucial MX300 1TB SATA, Samsung 830 256 GB SATA |
Display(s) | Nixeus NX-EDG27, and Samsung S23A700 |
Case | Fractal Design R5 |
Power Supply | Seasonic PRIME TITANIUM 850W |
Mouse | Logitech |
VR HMD | Oculus Rift |
Software | Windows 11 Pro, and Ubuntu 20.04 |
Apple's DRAM latency isn't stellar either (nearly 106 ns in that graph below). This is the raison d'être for that enormous L2 cache. AMD's MI300 shows the way, but I'm doubtful of such an implementation coming to us any time soon.Well, there’s multiple things going on at the same time. At one point, performance gains were made by increasing clocks and improving IPC, then we added more cores. Now, adding more cores is diminishing returns. Higher clocks are not only harder to reach, but they also have a diminishing return. 400 more MHz on a chip like this is only 5%. That leaves architectural improvements, but some of those gains are offset by patching flaws. Now throw in P+E, chiplets, tiles, Thread Directors, preferred cores, parked cores, Windows Schedulers, and all that, and today’s CPUs are just begging for regressions and disappointments. There’s just so many more ways for things to go wrong.
Perhaps some form of high-speed on package memory could supplement trips to the system RAM, like what Apple is doing with M-class SOCs? 8-16GB might help offset system costs, even if that means CPU prices go up some. That really seems like the future to me, where system RAM takes a step back for intensive workloads. Sure, eventually an app needs to hit system RAM, but perhaps the next major gain is to keep more tasks on-package. X3Ds do this already, and if they could clock as high as non-3DV chips, there would be no losses.
System Name | Silent |
---|---|
Processor | Ryzen 7800X3D @ 5.15ghz BCLK OC, TG AM5 High Performance Heatspreader |
Motherboard | ASUS ROG Strix X670E-I, chipset fans replaced with Noctua A14x25 G2 |
Cooling | Optimus Block, HWLabs Copper 240/40 + 240/30, D5/Res, 4x Noctua A12x25, 1x A14G2, Mayhems Ultra Pure |
Memory | 32 GB Dominator Platinum 6150 MT 26-36-36-48, 56.6ns AIDA, 2050 FCLK, 160 ns tRFC, active cooled |
Video Card(s) | RTX 3080 Ti Founders Edition, Conductonaut Extreme, 18 W/mK MinusPad Extreme, Corsair XG7 Waterblock |
Storage | Intel Optane DC P1600X 118 GB, Samsung 990 Pro 2 TB |
Display(s) | 32" 240 Hz 1440p Samsung G7, 31.5" 165 Hz 1440p LG NanoIPS Ultragear, MX900 dual gas VESA mount |
Case | Sliger SM570 CNC Aluminium 13-Litre, 3D printed feet, custom front, LINKUP Ultra PCIe 4.0 x16 white |
Audio Device(s) | Audeze Maxwell Ultraviolet w/upgrade pads & LCD headband, Galaxy Buds 3 Pro, Razer Nommo Pro |
Power Supply | SF750 Plat, full transparent custom cables, Sentinel Pro 1500 Online Double Conversion UPS w/Noctua |
Mouse | Razer Viper V3 Pro 8 KHz Mercury White w/Tiger Ice Skates & Pulsar Supergrip tape, Razer Atlas |
Keyboard | Wooting 60HE+ module, TOFU-R CNC Alu/Brass, SS Prismcaps W+Jellykey, LekkerV2 mod, TLabs Leath/Suede |
Software | Windows 11 IoT Enterprise LTSC 24H2 |
Benchmark Scores | Legendary |
Mostly true with 2 X3D, but there's still the issue of data having to do the expensive migration from CCD to IO die to CCD since there's no direct communication between the CCDs.What he and multiple people on the forum told you is that the 7900X3D has inefficient topology. That didn't change. The 7950X3D doesn't have the same problem because it's 8+8, and the 9950X3D should finally do away with all major topology issues because it'll have 2 X3D CCDs. Zen 5 X3D will invalidate his point, especially if it's unlocked as rumored.
System Name | My Ryzen 7 7700X Super Computer |
---|---|
Processor | AMD Ryzen 7 7700X |
Motherboard | Gigabyte B650 Aorus Elite AX |
Cooling | DeepCool AK620 with Arctic Silver 5 |
Memory | 2x16GB G.Skill Trident Z5 NEO DDR5 EXPO (CL30) |
Video Card(s) | XFX AMD Radeon RX 7900 GRE |
Storage | Samsung 980 EVO 1 TB NVMe SSD (System Drive), Samsung 970 EVO 500 GB NVMe SSD (Game Drive) |
Display(s) | Acer Nitro XV272U (DisplayPort) and Acer Nitro XV270U (DisplayPort) |
Case | Lian Li LANCOOL II MESH C |
Audio Device(s) | On-Board Sound / Sony WH-XB910N Bluetooth Headphones |
Power Supply | MSI A850GF |
Mouse | Logitech M705 |
Keyboard | Steelseries |
Software | Windows 11 Pro 64-bit |
Benchmark Scores | https://valid.x86.fr/liwjs3 |
If the rumors are true, then that's what's going to happen.Mostly true with 2 X3D, but there's still the issue of data having to do the expensive migration from CCD to IO die to CCD since there's no direct communication between the CCDs.
Zen 6 hopefully solves this with an active interposer.
Processor | 7800X3D 2x16GB CO |
---|---|
Motherboard | Asrock B650m HDV |
Cooling | Peerless Assassin SE |
Memory | 2x16GB DR A-die@6000c30 tuned |
Video Card(s) | Asus 4070 dual OC 2610@915mv |
Storage | WD blue 1TB nvme |
Display(s) | Lenovo G24-10 144Hz |
Case | Corsair D4000 Airflow |
Power Supply | EVGA GQ 650W |
Software | Windows 10 home 64 |
Benchmark Scores | Superposition 8k 5267 Aida64 58.5ns |
And I hope they seriously upgrades the I/O-die so it can run far better fclkMostly true with 2 X3D, but there's still the issue of data having to do the expensive migration from CCD to IO die to CCD since there's no direct communication between the CCDs.
Zen 6 hopefully solves this with an active interposer.
No, it didn't. Zen 5 is a significant improvement over Zen 4, but you wouldn't know it if you only considered gaming. What's clear is that the memory wall is making scaling ever more difficult.
Processor | 9950x |
---|---|
Motherboard | Asus Strix X870E-E |
Cooling | Kraken Elite 280 |
Memory | 64GB G.skill 6000mhz CL30 |
Video Card(s) | Sapphire 7900XTX Pulse |
Storage | 1X 4TB MP700 Pro - 1 X 4TB SN850X |
Display(s) | LG 32" 4K OLED + LG 38" IPS |
Case | Lian Li o11 Air Mini |
Power Supply | Corsair RM1000x |
Software | WIndows 11 Pro |
Processor | Intel Core i5-4690 |
---|---|
Motherboard | MSI H97 PC Mate |
Video Card(s) | PowerColor Red Devil RX 480 8GB |
Case | be quiet! Silent Base 800 Orange Window |
The day they add the clown emoji like on Steam will always be too lateI can see you still have a certain level of wilful ignorance when presented with hard data.
@W1zzard
I value very highly your reviews because they test the CPUs from almost all angles and they are highly trustworthy. However one angle is completely missing: long term load tests. Could you please add at least one page of tests that compare the CPUs on tasks that take at least 15 minutes for the CPU to complete? For example one 15 minute long game test, one 15 minute long video encoding, etc.? I'm fully aware that doing long term load test is very time consuming, however in the review most tests take less than 2 minutes for the CPU to complete. Such short tests highly favors CPUs that have very high short term boost. Or please consider releasing an extra review that compares some of the tested CPUs at long term load test. After all, you have been doing such specialized reviews that test some special aspect of the HW in the past. Like for example PCI-E scaling on the GPUs, memory speed scaling for the CPUs, etc.
Thank you!
System Name | Silent |
---|---|
Processor | Ryzen 7800X3D @ 5.15ghz BCLK OC, TG AM5 High Performance Heatspreader |
Motherboard | ASUS ROG Strix X670E-I, chipset fans replaced with Noctua A14x25 G2 |
Cooling | Optimus Block, HWLabs Copper 240/40 + 240/30, D5/Res, 4x Noctua A12x25, 1x A14G2, Mayhems Ultra Pure |
Memory | 32 GB Dominator Platinum 6150 MT 26-36-36-48, 56.6ns AIDA, 2050 FCLK, 160 ns tRFC, active cooled |
Video Card(s) | RTX 3080 Ti Founders Edition, Conductonaut Extreme, 18 W/mK MinusPad Extreme, Corsair XG7 Waterblock |
Storage | Intel Optane DC P1600X 118 GB, Samsung 990 Pro 2 TB |
Display(s) | 32" 240 Hz 1440p Samsung G7, 31.5" 165 Hz 1440p LG NanoIPS Ultragear, MX900 dual gas VESA mount |
Case | Sliger SM570 CNC Aluminium 13-Litre, 3D printed feet, custom front, LINKUP Ultra PCIe 4.0 x16 white |
Audio Device(s) | Audeze Maxwell Ultraviolet w/upgrade pads & LCD headband, Galaxy Buds 3 Pro, Razer Nommo Pro |
Power Supply | SF750 Plat, full transparent custom cables, Sentinel Pro 1500 Online Double Conversion UPS w/Noctua |
Mouse | Razer Viper V3 Pro 8 KHz Mercury White w/Tiger Ice Skates & Pulsar Supergrip tape, Razer Atlas |
Keyboard | Wooting 60HE+ module, TOFU-R CNC Alu/Brass, SS Prismcaps W+Jellykey, LekkerV2 mod, TLabs Leath/Suede |
Software | Windows 11 IoT Enterprise LTSC 24H2 |
Benchmark Scores | Legendary |
Ya it's better than Raptor Lake IMC, when it doesn't count, with APUs.AMD's IMC is quite good - better even than Intel's at running high speed memory (just look at the APUs); the problem is routing the chiplet interconnect over the package, which severely limits the bandwidth and speed. Hopefully Zen 6 will finally be the iteration that moves to 2.5D packaging for the CCDs and IOD, which would very likely remove that bottleneck.