Um, no. My 7890XE DOES NOT pull 500W. That's hilarious.
Here's my results @ 4.4 GHz:
https://www.techpowerup.com/reviews/ASRock/X299_Professional_Gaming_i9_XE/11.html
4.6 GHz:
https://www.techpowerup.com/reviews/ASRock/X299_Extreme4/11.html
nowhere near 500W. Sorry.
Max I got out of my 1950X:
https://www.techpowerup.com/reviews/ASRock/X399M_Taichi/11.html
Like I mean, this isn't new stuff; it's been posted here on TPU for a while now. And it's not exactly surprising that my results differ from everyone else because they always do, because I measure power over the 8-pin (which is true CPU power) and not from the wall like everyone else does. Been doing it this way for YEARS now.
I'm not TRYING to say anything. I'm stating facts that were already disclosed if you read OUR reviews. So yeah, I guess that everyone DOES NOT KNOW what these CPUs pull, because clearly you don't...
And boy, if my next board review gets posted, it's going to cause yet another shit storm. I specifically waited with these reviews until other sites were done because I knew I was going to show a different perspective. You know, I got boards specifically designed for the 7890XE.... and for the 1950X.
At stock, Intel's 165W chip does better. Overclocked is another matter, but this is partially deflated on AMD's side because they cannot scale up the speed. No big deal. In fact, I was kind of hinting at the same thing you're suggesting, but because of a lack of playing with this hardware directly, I think you've made some assumptions about this hardware that give you the wrong impression about how these chips actually work
. Could I make my 7980XE pull 500W? You bet. Can you guess the speed required to do so? I'ts FAR above 4.5 GHz.