- Joined
- Jun 22, 2015
- Messages
- 76 (0.02/day)
Processor | AMD R7 3800X EKWB |
---|---|
Motherboard | Asus Tuf B450M-Pro µATX +MosfetWB (x2) |
Cooling | EKWB on CPU + GPU / Heatkiller 60/80 on Mosfets / Black Ice SR-1 240mm |
Memory | 2x8GB G.Skill DDR4 3200C14 @ ---- |
Video Card(s) | Vega64 EKWB |
Storage | Samsung 512GB NVMe 3.0 x4 / Crucial P1 1TB NVMe 3.0 x2 |
Display(s) | Asus ProArt 23" 1080p / Acer 27" 144Hz FreeSync IPS |
Case | Fractal Design Arc Mini R2 |
Power Supply | SeaSonic 850W |
Keyboard | Ducky One TKL / MX Brown |
The other half of that argument is the AMD Naples board they showed off. With at least 750W going in, the PCIe slots are pretty much guaranteed to be getting at least 500W all up. If they're "overloading" the connections (at full tilt, each pin in a PCIe, EPS/CPU and ATX power connector is rated up to something like 9A, so a 6-pin PCIe is safe for 200W on it's own, at 8-pin safe for 300W, with current server cards using only a single 8-pin for 300W cards), pulling in the 1500W for 2 150W CPUs and 4 300W cards is entirely within the realm of possibility. It may not be PCIe 4.0 on Zen, but power support may well trickle down into a revision of 3.x.
I'm personally not too worried about the safety of pushing 300W through the PCIe slot: 300W is only 25A at 12V. Compare that to the literal hundreds of amps (150+W at less than 1V) CPUs have to be fed over very similar surface areas
Yes, It's also a server board. I don't think any official info on those are available yet, but speculation has it that it is for the PCIe slots, yes.
I still wouldn't see that trickle down to enthusiast immediately, even if it were the case.
I could see the server people paying for a high layer-high power mobo, for specific cards, not necessarily GPU's.
I just don't see the need to change the norm for desktops.
Two 1080's on one card will take you over the PCIe spec.
I think this is just what the AIB's/Constructors/AMD/Nvidia etc and the others want.