Thanks for the lecture btw.
Well as a matter of fact you didn't get what i said regarding your previous post. I was referring about the "boost is a sick joke".
(that is wrong) I don't think it is. It works perfectly fine and as intended. What I get from your post is that you are claiming the boost is shit and AMD scammed people off with it because it is not boosting as it should. When you tweak your settings you can achieve more and I've mentioned it in my post but I guess you have missed it.
BTW I have two 3970x threadrippers and of course they are boosting to 4.5 when not heavy taxed (single core utilization). With Cinebench on the other hand the boost is going up to 3.8-3.9 but I didn't tweak anything and my cooling is an air cooler Noctua noctua nh-u9 tr4-sp3 crap. If I had liquid the situation would have been way different. Your tweaks, btw, are software and that is not as it should have been (unless I read your earlier posts incorrectly). Does this mean if you boost 200Mhz more, that means the boost is shit? Of course not. Nobody misled anything. Go to the AMD webpage
https://www.amd.com/en/products/cpu/amd-ryzen-9-3950x and go to the boost section. It says single core boost 4.7Ghz. The default is rather
So if you claim that you have 4.3 instead of 4 on all cores that is tweaking. Getting better cooling instead of stock cooler. You don't have a stock cooler do you?
Sometimes I don't understand you people. You get some performance boost through OC/tweaks like you Mr. and you claim AMD boost is shit because you can get more out of the CPU
When AMD maxes out the CPU it is still shit because there is no OC headroom. The default settings are for all the processors released like 3950x. The silicon may vary one from the other ( you mentioned that too "silicon lottery) remember? The specs are for all 3950x's not individual. All processors released will work that way (safe default way not harming the hardware) if you get a chance to get more out of your CPU then be happy you can't blame something that ain't there.
That is about it
At least that is how I get your issue with the AMD boost.
You point me in the direction of the 3950X stock cooler and I will tell you if I have it or not.
I will save you the trouble,
there's no stock cooler that comes with the 3950X.
OK so now we have that out of the way I can continue with the "Lecture".
When I replied to you I gave you the benefit of the doubt that I was not clear enough in my post and that a misunderstanding had ensued. Now I realise from this reply that you are just being obtuse.
I have to say that when you said about the boost that, "It works perfectly fine and as intended", I had a LOL moment.
What you are basically saying is that boost is great because it is there when you need it least.
You do not get my "issues" with AMD boost at all.
When speaking of "Boost" with regard to AMD CPUs we are talking about two completely different things:
1) PB2 or "Precision Boost" 2
2) PBO or "Precision Boost Overdrive"
PB2 kinda sorta works as long as you are doing next to nothing with your system (as you say light loads or single threaded loads), or as I like to say, "It does naff-all quicker".
PBO aside from punting in noticeably more voltage and current ends up not being of much use when under load and basically does naff-all even quicker in conjunction with PB2.
With regard to cooling I have tested a single chiplet Ryzen 5 3600X, a double chiplet Ryzen 9 3900X which I have on loan from a friend and my own Ryzen 9 3950X with both air cooling and water cooling (for the air cooling I have a Noctua NH-U12A and for the water cooling I have an AlphaCool Eisbaer 360 AIO with three 120mm Noctua NF-A12x25 fans).
On the single chiplet CPU, the 3600X, the air cooler was noticeably better than the AIO, which is not surprising when you consider that less than 25% of the business part of the AIO cooler, the part of the waterblock which has the heat exchanging fins, covers the hotspot; whereas with the NH-U12A half of the seven heatpipes cover and transfer heat away from that hotspot.
When it comes to the dual chiplet CPUs I have tested (3900X and 3950X) the water cooler is better at cooling the CPU than the air cooler. There's not as much in it as there would be if the CPU was located in the centre of the PCB as opposed to being off-centre, because again the AIO cannot bring its full cooling potential to bear on the CPU hotspots.
There is another component which is temperature sensitive which plays a bit role in performance and that would be Infinity Fabric. With the air cooler on the dual chiplet CPUs the temp, when running CineBench R20 all core went beyond 85 °C and had a tendency to hard crash the system when the IF was cranked up to 1867 MHz (3733 RAM speed) but would be stable at 1800 MHz (3600 RAM speed) whereas the AIO keeps the temp below that threshold and causes no problems.
When you speak of my tweaks being "Software" you do realise that the BIOS is also a piece of software don't you?
The fact of the matter is that because AMD supplies the actual BIOS as a binary (AGESA), what one would normally consider to be "The BIOS" is in fact just a configuration utility for the AGESA. For this reason, if you look at the guide I wrote, I stick to configuring the motherboard parameters (LLC for instance) to the motherboard BIOS and went with Ryzen Master to configure the CPU and RAM because from my extensive testing I have found that Ryzen Master works a lot better in conjunction with AGESA than the BIOS of my mother board.
I have no idea why you thought that linking to the AMD 3950X page when you obviously didn't read it yourself - otherwise you would have known that the 3950X does not come with a cooler i.e. the part where it states, "Thermal Solution (PIB): Cooler Not Included, Liquid Cooling Recommended".
I am however gratified to note that you recognise that what I have done, and what I suggest in the guide is, in your words a "Tweaking" of my system and not an "OverClock". I prefer the term "Configuration".
I notice you make no mention of what voltage your Threadrippers are running on "stock". It would also be nice to know what the specs are other than the cooler.