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- Mar 31, 2014
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System Name | Indis the Fair (cursed edition) |
---|---|
Processor | 11900k 5.1/4.9 undervolted. |
Motherboard | MSI Z590 Unify-X |
Cooling | Heatkiller VI Pro, VPP755 V.3, XSPC TX360 slim radiator, 3xA12x25, 4x Arctic P14 case fans |
Memory | G.Skill Ripjaws V 2x16GB 4000 16-19-19 (b-die@3600 14-14-14 1.45v) |
Video Card(s) | EVGA 2080 Super Hybrid (T30-120 fan) |
Storage | 970EVO 1TB, 660p 1TB, WD Blue 3D 1TB, Sandisk Ultra 3D 2TB |
Display(s) | BenQ XL2546K, Dell P2417H |
Case | FD Define 7 |
Audio Device(s) | DT770 Pro, Topping A50, Focusrite Scarlett 2i2, Røde VXLR+, Modmic 5 |
Power Supply | Seasonic 860w Platinum |
Mouse | Razer Viper Mini, Odin Infinity mousepad |
Keyboard | GMMK Fullsize v2 (Boba U4Ts) |
Software | Win10 x64/Win7 x64/Ubuntu |
There are plenty of examples of process upgrades being downgrades in peak performance. These nodes are not optimised for peak clocks most of the time, they have to work well in ranges required by the majority of the market which is servers in the case of zen and laptops/workstations/servers in the case of intel's offerings. In all of these configurations power efficiency is key, so what they get at the high end is really just a bonus most of the time.Of course you have to consider attainable clocks when judging performance, that's why I specified AMD needs to increase clock speeds. If AMD could clock even close to Intel they would be in great shape.
I don't know how you can claim that a new process won't help.
Look at SB to IVB and HSW to BDW, both cases the new node lost somewhere around 300MHz. Not to mention that the newer skylake iterations are faster by nature of being on the same node after several refinements.