- Joined
- May 22, 2024
- Messages
- 415 (1.83/day)
System Name | Kuro |
---|---|
Processor | AMD Ryzen 7 7800X3D@65W |
Motherboard | MSI MAG B650 Tomahawk WiFi |
Cooling | Thermalright Phantom Spirit 120 EVO |
Memory | Corsair DDR5 6000C30 2x48GB (Hynix M)@6000 30-36-36-76 1.36V |
Video Card(s) | PNY XLR8 RTX 4070 Ti SUPER 16G@200W |
Storage | Crucial T500 2TB + WD Blue 8TB |
Case | Lian Li LANCOOL 216 |
Power Supply | MSI MPG A850G |
Software | Ubuntu 24.04 LTS + Windows 10 Home Build 19045 |
Benchmark Scores | 17761 C23 Multi@65W |
A lot of people would not buy a video card or a processor with the full x16 bus width in that segment. I think it would have been more realistic to benchmark it with a 8500G, or a RX 6500 XT, which would be PCIe 3.0 x4. PCIe bandwidth mattered much less when there is sufficient VRAM.Like it even matters when switching to PCIE 3.0 x16 for the RTX 4090 results in a 2% dent on average. Pointless complaint.
As to the chipset themselves, they hardly bring anything new to the table anyway, when the core southbridge chip is the very same, and USB4 is external to that chip. Buying a new motherboard right now would miss out on very little if anything in real term, and precisely nothing if you'd rather a third M.2 slot without eating into PEG lanes over 40Gbps USB4.