I Can probably remove 2 of the HDDs that are being used for redundancy right now and bring the amount down to 6 SATA ports, 2 for the ODDs, 2 for the SSDs, and 2 for the dual 8 TB hard disks. But PCIe lanes are already an issue on consumer builds nowadays. My current system has 24 lanes, which is enough for the graphics card, the sound card, the M.2 slot, and the motherboard built-in communication and connectivity features.
I only use the external disk as a backup; I never use it to edit live from it.
I have considered the Threadripper platform, but I am honestly scared by the sheer cost in the thousands just for the CPU. I don't know if it might be a good idea to go for older generation Threadripper ?
Thank you for the suggestion. May I ask what you would consider to be the closest motherboards series or families currently available that share some of the build quality I saw with the Sabertooth ? the TUF series seems to be way worse nowadays, and I wonder if there are currently any similar options from MSI or ASrock. I would rather avoid Gigabyte if possible as my experience with their customer service has been bad, to say the least. For the CPU, I was mostly considering the Ryzen 9900X and the similarily priced Ultra 7 265K from intel, although I am not sure which to pick yet given my needs. pairing that with 64 GB or 128 GB of dual memory DDR5 RAM sticks from corsair or crucial at the default clock setting. I would prefer not to bother with XMP for stability concerns. I am still running my DDR4 sticks at 2400 mhz. Although I am not sure if I should just get a 64 GB of RAM and upgrade later on (as I would probably not need more than 64 GB for the forseeable future, my current needs are maxing out in the high 50s) but I am wondering if that would cause instability issues due to the mismatch if I come to add more ram in the future. I could reuse my current cooler and get an attachment kit from be-quiet although buying a new one is relatively cheap I guess.
Here's the list I've compiled so far, minus the Motherboard. I am not sure if an Ultra 7 would be better suited for my workload but I am not sure if there are any degradation issues with that new series yet. We haven't seen much news regarding that:
PCPartPicker Part List
CPU: AMD Ryzen 9 9900X 4.4 GHz 12-Core Processor ($382.55 @ Amazon)
CPU Cooler: be quiet! Pure Rock 2 Black CPU Cooler ($44.90 @ Amazon)
Memory: Corsair Vengeance 64 GB (2 x 32 GB) DDR5-5200 CL40 Memory ($154.99 @ Amazon)
Total: $582.44
Prices include shipping, taxes, and discounts when available
Generated by PCPartPicker 2024-11-14 07:21 EST-0500
I will follow through on most suggestions here and stick to the RTX 2060S for a bit longer and upgrade that once the 5000 comes out although it seems to be showing some occasional problems. I do have some questions.
Do you think my PSU listed in the first post would be able to handle a mid-tier GPU from the RTX 4000 or rumoured RTX 5000 series? I would prefer not to replace that if possible to save some trouble.
Am I expected to notice the downgrade from quad channel RAM to dual-channel? especially when I'm going from DDR4 to DDR5 ?
Do I really need all those PCIe lanes with modern cards ? or would running the upcoming GPU on 8x lanes still provide a significant advantage over what I am currently running ? I wouldn't mind switching the Audio Card for an external one and the smaller SSDs for a bigger M.2 one, although I would rather avoid the additional spending as they still work just fine for my needs. I have never been satisfied with onboard audio.
Thank you again to all of you guys for providing your suggestions and feedback, it is greatly appreciated!