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Processor | 5800x(2)/5700g/5600x/5600g/2700x/1700x/1700 |
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Motherboard | MSI B550 Carbon (2)/ MSI z490 Unify/Asus Strix B550-F/MSI B450 Tomahawk (3) |
Cooling | EK AIO 360 (2)/EK AIO 240, Arctic Cooling Freezer II 280/EVGA CLC 280/Noctua D15/Cryorig M9(2) |
Memory | 32 GB Ballistix Elite/32 GB TridentZ/16GB Mushkin Redline Black/16 GB Dominator |
Video Card(s) | Asus Strix RTX3060/EVGA 970(2)/Asus 750 ti/Old Quadros |
Storage | Samsung 970 EVO M.2 NVMe 500GB/WD Black M.2 NVMe 500GB/Adata 500gb NVMe |
Display(s) | Acer 1080p 22"/ (3) Samsung 22" 1080p |
Case | (2) Lian Li Lancool II Mesh/Corsair 4000D /Phanteks Eclipse 500a/Be Quiet Pure Base 500/Bones of HAF |
Power Supply | EVGA Supernova 850G(2)/EVGA Supernova GT 650w/Phantek Amps 750w/Seasonic Focus 750w |
Mouse | Generic Black wireless (5) |
Keyboard | Generic Black wireless (5) |
Software | Win 10/Ubuntu |
Yeah, I'm not saying that every application is going to be faster in a large way. But usage scenarios that do take advantage of the extra bandwidth that the platform provides, do excel. There are beenfits to be had, but I connot deny that the average user isn't going to benefit from it. Those that run 3 or 4 VGAs, and multiple monitors...yes, they will.
I mean really, 1155 is Intel's entry-level platform, IGP included. It is a killer entry level paltform though, without a doubt, and will provide 99% of users will more power than they need. I am not one of those users.
The extra power consumption is a tough pill to swallow, but like I care. For the games I play, it's better.
SiSoft Sandra is the only bench right now that shows the extra Bandwidth. It's just about the algorithms used for the tests that are at fault. Many need updates, but I do use Sandra in my memory reviews, so you can see the difference there, at least.
Really, if you want affordable highly threaded, FX-8150 is the CPU of my own choice. Cost/Perforamnce is damn good.
If it must be X79, 3930K with and OC warranty, with 4.8 GHz is damn snappy. Xeons, with no OC, and no OC warranty, are not something I'd personally consider.
For mutli-GPU gamers on X79, the 4-core with HT, if priced right, would be the CPU to get, because as mentioned the extra cores don't offer much, overall.
So, Dave, what is the benefit of x79 vs P67/Z68 besides the extra bandwith? Beyond gaming with multi gpus, what usage scenarios would justify choosing x79 over the significantly cheaper platform? I've tried to come up with a shred of justification to do the upgrade, just like I do with every new platform. However, finding this justification has been more difficult than usual. Really not being rhetorical here...