Page 2 of 3 FirstFirst
1
2
3
LastLast
  1. #21
    Quote Originally Posted by Nerph- View Post
    So if I understand it right, that means AMD processors for the next coming generations will use the AM5 socket? It's definitely something that annoys me with Intel, having to change mobo so quickly because of different sockets.

    How long a lifespan has AM4 had?
    This is one of those things where there's a distinction without a difference.

    Yes, Intel sockets generally only last two chip generations. AM4 (very technically) lasted 4 (Ryzen 1000, 2000, 3000, 5000 - there are some APUs that were labelled 4000 series chips but those were just 3000-series chips with GPU cores on them)...

    But only sorta. A lot of motherboards, particularly on the lower end (the entire original 300 series boards, many lower end to low-mid-range 400 series boards) couldn't be updated to support later chips... so while they used the same socket, they werent necessarily compatible and it could be very confusing because some boards from the same manufacturer that were almost indentical had different upgrade possibilities.

    However, in both cases, the usefulness of in-place upgrades is near zero. 99%+ of users never do an in-socket upgrade, regardless of how long the socket is "viable" for. If you had an 8600K, like i do (released in 2017), you were never going to be dropping in a 10600K or something. The performance uplift was never going to be worth the 300$. Even with 12th gen available (going on 5 years later) i have no intention of upgrading. The 8600K still does everything i need it to do exceptionally well, with a single mid-life GPU upgrade (started with a 1080Ti, went to a 3080).

    So if id been on an AM4 platform.... i still wouldn't have upgraded, so the same socket being used for 4-5 years is materially irrelevant. About the only possible realistic benefit is that if the CPU dies for some reason (ive never had this happen in 500+ depolyed machines, its always been the board that packed it in) you could drop in a new one without having to pay potentially inflated "no longer in production" prices.

    But thats so rediculously niche that its nearly irrelevant.

    So, its a nice presentation talking point that has literally zero actual application for 99% of users. AM4 lasted 5 whole years! So what? You werent going to be upgrading your CPU every year anyway, so... how does it even matter? (This may not apply to some uses - prosumer/pro creators definitely can upgrade every year, but generally, if they had to, they could easily absorb the cost of a new MoBo as well, as a 10% increase in performance means 10% more work completed at 100$+ an hour and it pays for itself rapidly).

    Its basically a marketing line that AMD uses to make themselves appeaer more consumer friendly when in reality, there's no effective difference because users are simply not doing drop-in upgrades in high enough numbers to ever be relevant.

    If you built an Alder Lake system now, the fact that you wouldn't be able to drop in an upgrade (maybe?) after Raptor Lake means... what? That Alder Lake system is going to last you 4-6 years anyway, no problem. So who cares.

    - - - Updated - - -

    Quote Originally Posted by Nerph- View Post
    Will I need DDR5 ram with the Zen 4 (AM5) CPU's? Or will there be motherboards that use DDR4?
    Im not 100% on these (and a few people who replied, i have blocked) but AFAIK Zen 4 requires DDR5.

  2. #22
    Fluffy Kitten Nerph-'s Avatar
    15+ Year Old Account
    Join Date
    Sep 2008
    Location
    Belgium
    Posts
    8,760
    That's a very valid point Kagthul. I was looking to replace my CPU, motherboard and RAM possibly next month sometime but it's a tricky choice. If people are correct that DDR5 is going to be expensive, and if the next gen will require DDR5, then I'd probably prefer getting an AM4 socket (or something Intel) and DDR4 ram.

  3. #23
    Fluffy Kitten Nerph-'s Avatar
    15+ Year Old Account
    Join Date
    Sep 2008
    Location
    Belgium
    Posts
    8,760
    Quote Originally Posted by Vegas82 View Post
    Sounds like a good way to handicap yourself going forward. I’d upgrade in a year considering your current hardware.
    Also true. Haha, decisions are hard ;D

  4. #24
    Quote Originally Posted by Nerph- View Post
    Also true. Haha, decisions are hard ;D
    Hes one of the people i have blocked. Because he gives awful "advice".

    Going with Alder Lake now is not going to handicap you for the effective 4-6 year life of the machine. Hell, even going with a Zen 3 part wouldnt handicap you. Its not like CPUs become imediately shit when a new CPU comes out. Especially when the extra performance is often what i label "pointless peformance".

    Sure, an Alder Lake CPU is ~20% faster than an equivalent AMD chip right now (5000 series); these are imaginary numbers just being used for the sake of argument.

    But when the R7 3800X can already put out 200fps in games paired with the right GPU.... does the Alder Lake CPU being able to output (potentially, because as you jump up from 1080p, CPU becomes less and less relevant as long as it is "strong enough" to feed the GPU) 240 fps really matter?

    Chances are, for most people... it does not.

    Again, im not saying upgrade now, or dont wait for Zen 4/Ryzen 7000. Thats a decision you have to make.

    But you can be fairly confident that any system you build new right now will perform well for 4+ years, DDR4 or not (right now, fast low latency DDR4 kits are just as good as what is currently available from DDR5, but are actually available and affordable at sub-100$ for 16GB or about 140$ for 32GB). Its going to take several years for DDR5 to really become "mainstream" and finally get to speeds where it outperforms DDR4 for consumers... just like it took DDR4 several years to transition from its debut on HEDT systems (Xeons) to consumer/mainstream use... because just like now, fast, low latency DDR3 performed just as well as early DDR4 (remember DDR4 started at 2166 CL20!)

    So, if you're not satisifed with your current system, an upgrade now to Alder Lake or Zen 3/Ryzen 5000 will do you just fine for years. Of the two, id recommend Alder Lake as if you step up to the 12700 (only 339$) youll get 8 P-cores (16 threads w/HT) and 4 E-cores... and its blazingly fast. You can get a DDR4 capable board, and pair it with a nice fast kit of DDR4, and be fine for the expected life of the machine.

    If you're satisfied with your current performance... .ride that 9600K down in flames. I certainly intend to with my 8600K. I MIGHT consider upgrading to Raptor Lake at the end of this year/early next year. Maybe. If the price is right and/or my system somehow starts to suck between now and then (doesn't seem likely, especially since in my case (very specific to me) since i dont use it for my daily driver/basic computing - just gaming - it has nothing going on in the background to potentially slow it down).

    In the end, its about meeting your needs.

    Or, it can be about "i need some retail gadget therapy" - i have "upgraded" things that did not need an upgrade because damn it, i just want a new gadget.

    Modern CPUs, from both manufacturers, are plenty powerful and as long as you dont go with the bargain basement chips (i3s/Celerons, Ryzen 3s) theyll last you years.

  5. #25
    Fluffy Kitten Nerph-'s Avatar
    15+ Year Old Account
    Join Date
    Sep 2008
    Location
    Belgium
    Posts
    8,760
    Yeah, I'm not going to get an i9-9900k or anything and if upgrading my RAM now (or well, in a month) is no drastic improvement, then I might just save that money for when something breaks.

  6. #26
    Quote Originally Posted by Vegas82 View Post
    Dude is looking at upgrading 3 years after his last purchase. Nobody is talking about alder lake, it’s am5 vs am4. Buying a dead end processor/mobo doesn’t allow for a cheaper upgrade in 3 years like buying into am5 does(hell, 5 years if they do an am4). Your advice here is hilarious.
    It's incredibly thorough and insightful knowledge being dropped. To be fair, your advice comes off more as base talking points with significantly less depth.

    No offense.
    ~steppin large and laughin easy~

  7. #27
    Pit Lord rogoth's Avatar
    10+ Year Old Account
    Join Date
    Feb 2011
    Location
    in the land of killer unicrons
    Posts
    2,474
    Quote Originally Posted by Kagthul View Post
    This is one of those things where there's a distinction without a difference.

    Yes, Intel sockets generally only last two chip generations. AM4 (very technically) lasted 4 (Ryzen 1000, 2000, 3000, 5000 - there are some APUs that were labelled 4000 series chips but those were just 3000-series chips with GPU cores on them)...

    But only sorta. A lot of motherboards, particularly on the lower end (the entire original 300 series boards, many lower end to low-mid-range 400 series boards) couldn't be updated to support later chips... so while they used the same socket, they werent necessarily compatible and it could be very confusing because some boards from the same manufacturer that were almost indentical had different upgrade possibilities.

    However, in both cases, the usefulness of in-place upgrades is near zero. 99%+ of users never do an in-socket upgrade, regardless of how long the socket is "viable" for. If you had an 8600K, like i do (released in 2017), you were never going to be dropping in a 10600K or something. The performance uplift was never going to be worth the 300$. Even with 12th gen available (going on 5 years later) i have no intention of upgrading. The 8600K still does everything i need it to do exceptionally well, with a single mid-life GPU upgrade (started with a 1080Ti, went to a 3080).

    So if id been on an AM4 platform.... i still wouldn't have upgraded, so the same socket being used for 4-5 years is materially irrelevant. About the only possible realistic benefit is that if the CPU dies for some reason (ive never had this happen in 500+ depolyed machines, its always been the board that packed it in) you could drop in a new one without having to pay potentially inflated "no longer in production" prices.

    But thats so rediculously niche that its nearly irrelevant.

    So, its a nice presentation talking point that has literally zero actual application for 99% of users. AM4 lasted 5 whole years! So what? You werent going to be upgrading your CPU every year anyway, so... how does it even matter? (This may not apply to some uses - prosumer/pro creators definitely can upgrade every year, but generally, if they had to, they could easily absorb the cost of a new MoBo as well, as a 10% increase in performance means 10% more work completed at 100$+ an hour and it pays for itself rapidly).

    Its basically a marketing line that AMD uses to make themselves appeaer more consumer friendly when in reality, there's no effective difference because users are simply not doing drop-in upgrades in high enough numbers to ever be relevant.

    If you built an Alder Lake system now, the fact that you wouldn't be able to drop in an upgrade (maybe?) after Raptor Lake means... what? That Alder Lake system is going to last you 4-6 years anyway, no problem. So who cares.

    - - - Updated - - -



    Im not 100% on these (and a few people who replied, i have blocked) but AFAIK Zen 4 requires DDR5.
    this is factually incorrect, for years now people have been flashing new bios updates onto the older 300 series chipsets and running 3000 and 5000 series CPU's on them, it's just that the CPU's can't or won't reach their peak performance levels on that chipset, furthermore AMD is toying with the idea of officially supporting ALL current Ryzen CPU's on 300 series chipsets, just with the disclaimer that not all technologies will function on these older chipsets.


    it's unknown how long Z690 boards will be supported for, it's also not known how this new core architecture design of 'big core + little core' will function long term, unlike Ryzen which has matured very well and has seen some astronomical performance upgrades, keep in mind that even with the new CCX design INTEL are still using a 10nm manufacturing process, which is seen in the utterly ridiculous power consumption of their chips, in order to match and try to beat AMD they have cranked the dial up past 11 on TDP, and 'zen 4' is going to be using the TSMC 5nm manufacturing process which will allow for EVEN BETTER thermal performance as well as overall CPU performance, and with the absolutely ridiculous rise in household energy prices globally (could be more or less depending on where people live so local variations will need to be taken into account), for the first time in a long time power consumption is a major metric when looking at PC hardware for home use as a result of the global 'situation' right now.

  8. #28
    Pit Lord rogoth's Avatar
    10+ Year Old Account
    Join Date
    Feb 2011
    Location
    in the land of killer unicrons
    Posts
    2,474
    Quote Originally Posted by SirReal View Post
    It's incredibly thorough and insightful knowledge being dropped. To be fair, your advice comes off more as base talking points with significantly less depth.

    No offense.
    i just want to point out here, while AM4 is at 'end of life' in terms of upgrades and innovations, a high end 5000 series CPU (especially the new 3D vcache enahnced versions) on an x570 board will be more than sufficient for 95% of people for at least the next 4+ years MINIMUM, and with AM5 coming later this year along with more DDR5 innovation it's going to push down the price of the 'older' but more reliable and mature AM4/DDR4 stock that will make building a decent system to upgrade from what OP has currently MUCH CHEAPER than it would otherwise have been.

    - - - Updated - - -

    Quote Originally Posted by Vegas82 View Post
    Expecting more than a generation from intel sockets is folly.
    i agree, but INTEL are in uncharted waters right now, they have 'clawed back' the gaming crown by pushing the silicon almost to its limits, they quite literally can't produce much more in terms of raw performance out of their current manufacturing process, it might well be the case that they are forced to innovate with their new CCX design and actually make something that can compete as is without being a pseudo space heater, and honestly with the way the world is right now, shortage of raw materials, rising costs, i can see them taking a leaf out of AMD's book and supporting this newest socket of theirs for longer than they normally would due to these external extenuating circumstances.

  9. #29
    Pit Lord rogoth's Avatar
    10+ Year Old Account
    Join Date
    Feb 2011
    Location
    in the land of killer unicrons
    Posts
    2,474
    Quote Originally Posted by Vegas82 View Post
    The issue with this analysis is the AMD has targeted same socket upgrades for years, intel has said fuck that. Unless we get SOME indication this is changing expecting it to is silly,
    again like i said, i agree that INTEL historically have been known to behave that way, and i agree that it's not generally how they would do things, but i can see them potentially coming out and saying something on the topic when they announce their next product for the Z690 chipset.

  10. #30
    Quote Originally Posted by rogoth View Post
    this is factually incorrect, for years now people have been flashing new bios updates onto the older 300 series chipsets and running 3000 and 5000 series CPU's on them,
    Which is unofficial and not supported, and is meaningless.

    it's just that the CPU's can't or won't reach their peak performance levels on that chipset, furthermore AMD is toying with the idea of officially supporting ALL current Ryzen CPU's on 300 series chipsets, just with the disclaimer that not all technologies will function on these older chipsets.
    They also talked about this three years ago and it never materialized. So, yeah, when it happens, thatl matter. Until it does, point stands.

    it's unknown how long Z690 boards will be supported for,
    Raptor Lake is already confirmed for 600 series boards. Just like any other chipset, its about two generations.

    it's also not known how this new core architecture design of 'big core + little core' will function long term,
    What are you even trying to say with this gibberish? Its here to stay. X86-64 was the only major processor architecture that didnt ALREADY work this way. And given the massive performance gains it gives, there's absolutely no reason its going anywhere. Oh, and that whole part where AMD is ALSO going to do this with Zen 4+ or Zen 5 at the latest.

    unlike Ryzen which has matured very well and has seen some astronomical performance upgrades, keep in mind that even with the new CCX design INTEL are still using a 10nm manufacturing process,
    ... how you can be so willfully ignorant is hillarious. TSMC VASTLY overstates their process sizes. To qualify for 7nm, all TSMC requires is that 15% of the transistors meet that standard. The rest of the wafter can be as large as 12nm. That's why you cant (and have never been able to) just compare process sizes. (See also: architecture matters a whole lot more - the M1 ALSO uses TSMCs 7nm process and outperforms the shit out of Ryzen 3 and (lower end)5 chips and uses like 20W at full draw).

    which is seen in the utterly ridiculous power consumption of their chips,
    That was Rocket Lake, not Alder Lake.

    The i5 12400 keeps up with and often outperforms an R7 5800 for less power. Maybe.. keep up with modern reality. And its a 189$ chip (169$ for the -F SKU). The only Alder Lake chips that use a "ton" of power are heavily OCed 12900Ks - and they DONT actually consume much more than a heavily OCed 5950X or 5900X.. but they do crush the shit out of it in performance.

    in order to match and try to beat AMD they have cranked the dial up past 11 on TDP, and 'zen 4' is going to be using the TSMC 5nm manufacturing process which will allow for EVEN BETTER thermal performance as well as overall CPU performance,
    Facts not in evidence. In fact, if it was going to be the second coming, AMD woulld have been trumpeting that to the stars at CES. Instead, they barely mentioned performance or TDP numbers for Zen 4 at all.

    and with the absolutely ridiculous rise in household energy prices globally (could be more or less depending on where people live so local variations will need to be taken into account), for the first time in a long time power consumption is a major metric when looking at PC hardware for home use as a result of the global 'situation' right now.
    It really isn't. The average consumer doesn't look at power consumption. At all. its not even a consideration. Hell, the average consumer doesn't even really know that different CPUs consume different amounts of power.

    You're stuck in your anecdotal world where you apparently believe everyone is a well informed self-builder that knows the ins and outs of computer parts. That isn't the case. Most people dont even use desktops anymore, but laptops - particularly Chromebooks - where power consumption/performance is absolutely 1000% still in Intel's favor, with Alder Lake mobile CPUs utterly fucking destroying mobile Ryzen (up to 40% faster on a core-equivalent basis) for much less power.

    This is not to say that i think Zen 4 is going to be terrible or anything. It wont be. Itll be fine. It may even compete favorable with Alder Lake (except for that "requires DDR5 which provides no meaningful upgrade to DDR4 currently but costs 4x as much" part). I also dont think Zen 3 mobile parts suck or anything just because they use more power than Alder Lake mobile. They still perform quite well, and im sure Zen 4 mobile parts will do great.

    But your rampant ignorant fanboyism has no connection to reality. I dont have an issue with someone choosing AMD, even though Alder lake is currently massively superior. Because a lot of that performance is "pointless performance" unless you're doing very specific, high power workloads. But im not going to pretend that AM5/Zen 4 is going to be the second coming without even knowing anything about it other than it exists.

    - - - Updated - - -

    Dude is looking at upgrading 3 years after his last purchase. Nobody is talking about alder lake, it’s am5 vs am4. Buying a dead end processor/mobo doesn’t allow for a cheaper upgrade in 3 years like buying into am5 does(hell, 5 years if they do an am4). Your advice here is hilarious.
    "Nobody is talking about Alder Lake"

    Except like.. everyone, since it crushes the shit out of Zen 3 and is cheaper across the board (and doesn't require DDR5 and you're actually better served using DDR4 in most use cases). What drugs are you on?

    And yeah, it doesnt "Allow for a cheaper upgrade in three years blah blah blah drivel drivel drivel"... because people dont fucking do that, its irrelevant. Especially since inititally buying into this "cheaper upgrade later" platform will be hideously expensive (DDR5 only, kthx) making any potential savings later pointless.... and not even a gurantee, since if you bought 300 series boards... you cant use 5000 series chips, so your point doesn't even actually hold water. And that even assumes that succesive generations are going to be massive performance jumps. Only the jump from 2000 series to 3000 series was at all "big" and that was half due to finally managing to have a not-trash memory controller (given how sensitive Ryzen is to memory). ANd even then we're not talking 50% jumps here, kiddo.

    I mean, i get that ya'll have trouble divorcing your anecdotal experience from reality, but try to get your head around it: 99% of people do not do drop in upgrades. And VERY few people upgrade more frequently than 4-5 years. Like.. sub 1% on the first, and maybe 3-5% on the second.

    The likleyhood of the OP benefiting (IF he needs to upgrade soon, which is not a given) from holding off and spending twice as much to get into AM5 vs just going with a faster Alderlake DDR4 setup now is near zero.

    You remind me of the kind of people that were drooling over PCIe 4.0 SSDs... that you as an end user will literally never see any benefit from - and crowing about PCIe 4.0 being some crown jewel for AMD at the time when it provided literally no benefit and no upgrade benefit for the expected life of the machine (since even PCIe 3.0 STILL isnt saturated by a 3090Ti, though it is finally getting close). Just meaningless jibberish and noise that never took into account that the average end user would see zero benefit over the entire life of the machine.

    Quote Originally Posted by SirReal View Post
    It's incredibly thorough and insightful knowledge being dropped. To be fair, your advice comes off more as base talking points with significantly less depth.

    No offense.
    Hes a troll and always has been. Dont feel bad.
    Last edited by Kagthul; 2022-01-11 at 01:12 AM.

  11. #31
    Fluffy Kitten Nerph-'s Avatar
    15+ Year Old Account
    Join Date
    Sep 2008
    Location
    Belgium
    Posts
    8,760
    Quote Originally Posted by Kagthul View Post
    The likleyhood of the OP benefiting (IF he needs to upgrade soon, which is not a given) from holding off and spending twice as much to get into AM5 vs just going with a faster Alderlake DDR4 setup now is near zero.
    Just wanted to reply to this. I'm not having any issues with my current setup, was just looking to see if there was anywhere I could "drastically" improve it without having to spend a lot of money (like for example my initial question about i5-9600k vs i7-9700k, or getting different DDR4 ram, etc). These questions have been answered and I'm thankful for everyone's input.

  12. #32
    Right, like i said, if youre happy with it, ride that 9600K down in flames. Maybe OC it if you havent (depending on what cooler you have). My 8600k does 4.8ghz all core with an undervolt, and i can push it to 5ghz with a mild overvolt.

  13. #33
    Fluffy Kitten Nerph-'s Avatar
    15+ Year Old Account
    Join Date
    Sep 2008
    Location
    Belgium
    Posts
    8,760
    Quote Originally Posted by Kagthul View Post
    Right, like i said, if youre happy with it, ride that 9600K down in flames. Maybe OC it if you havent (depending on what cooler you have). My 8600k does 4.8ghz all core with an undervolt, and i can push it to 5ghz with a mild overvolt.
    I'm currently using a Corsair H100i Pro liquid cooling system.

    I'd like to try overclocking, but I wouldn't even know where to begin. I've googled a bit and there are so many guides but with different information... it's all pretty confusing, so any pointers on that would be much appreciated.

  14. #34
    Pit Lord rogoth's Avatar
    10+ Year Old Account
    Join Date
    Feb 2011
    Location
    in the land of killer unicrons
    Posts
    2,474
    Quote Originally Posted by Kagthul View Post
    Which is unofficial and not supported, and is meaningless.



    They also talked about this three years ago and it never materialized. So, yeah, when it happens, thatl matter. Until it does, point stands.



    Raptor Lake is already confirmed for 600 series boards. Just like any other chipset, its about two generations.



    What are you even trying to say with this gibberish? Its here to stay. X86-64 was the only major processor architecture that didnt ALREADY work this way. And given the massive performance gains it gives, there's absolutely no reason its going anywhere. Oh, and that whole part where AMD is ALSO going to do this with Zen 4+ or Zen 5 at the latest.



    ... how you can be so willfully ignorant is hillarious. TSMC VASTLY overstates their process sizes. To qualify for 7nm, all TSMC requires is that 15% of the transistors meet that standard. The rest of the wafter can be as large as 12nm. That's why you cant (and have never been able to) just compare process sizes. (See also: architecture matters a whole lot more - the M1 ALSO uses TSMCs 7nm process and outperforms the shit out of Ryzen 3 and (lower end)5 chips and uses like 20W at full draw).



    That was Rocket Lake, not Alder Lake.

    The i5 12400 keeps up with and often outperforms an R7 5800 for less power. Maybe.. keep up with modern reality. And its a 189$ chip (169$ for the -F SKU). The only Alder Lake chips that use a "ton" of power are heavily OCed 12900Ks - and they DONT actually consume much more than a heavily OCed 5950X or 5900X.. but they do crush the shit out of it in performance.



    Facts not in evidence. In fact, if it was going to be the second coming, AMD woulld have been trumpeting that to the stars at CES. Instead, they barely mentioned performance or TDP numbers for Zen 4 at all.



    It really isn't. The average consumer doesn't look at power consumption. At all. its not even a consideration. Hell, the average consumer doesn't even really know that different CPUs consume different amounts of power.

    You're stuck in your anecdotal world where you apparently believe everyone is a well informed self-builder that knows the ins and outs of computer parts. That isn't the case. Most people dont even use desktops anymore, but laptops - particularly Chromebooks - where power consumption/performance is absolutely 1000% still in Intel's favor, with Alder Lake mobile CPUs utterly fucking destroying mobile Ryzen (up to 40% faster on a core-equivalent basis) for much less power.

    This is not to say that i think Zen 4 is going to be terrible or anything. It wont be. Itll be fine. It may even compete favorable with Alder Lake (except for that "requires DDR5 which provides no meaningful upgrade to DDR4 currently but costs 4x as much" part). I also dont think Zen 3 mobile parts suck or anything just because they use more power than Alder Lake mobile. They still perform quite well, and im sure Zen 4 mobile parts will do great.

    But your rampant ignorant fanboyism has no connection to reality. I dont have an issue with someone choosing AMD, even though Alder lake is currently massively superior. Because a lot of that performance is "pointless performance" unless you're doing very specific, high power workloads. But im not going to pretend that AM5/Zen 4 is going to be the second coming without even knowing anything about it other than it exists.

    - - - Updated - - -



    "Nobody is talking about Alder Lake"

    Except like.. everyone, since it crushes the shit out of Zen 3 and is cheaper across the board (and doesn't require DDR5 and you're actually better served using DDR4 in most use cases). What drugs are you on?

    And yeah, it doesnt "Allow for a cheaper upgrade in three years blah blah blah drivel drivel drivel"... because people dont fucking do that, its irrelevant. Especially since inititally buying into this "cheaper upgrade later" platform will be hideously expensive (DDR5 only, kthx) making any potential savings later pointless.... and not even a gurantee, since if you bought 300 series boards... you cant use 5000 series chips, so your point doesn't even actually hold water. And that even assumes that succesive generations are going to be massive performance jumps. Only the jump from 2000 series to 3000 series was at all "big" and that was half due to finally managing to have a not-trash memory controller (given how sensitive Ryzen is to memory). ANd even then we're not talking 50% jumps here, kiddo.

    I mean, i get that ya'll have trouble divorcing your anecdotal experience from reality, but try to get your head around it: 99% of people do not do drop in upgrades. And VERY few people upgrade more frequently than 4-5 years. Like.. sub 1% on the first, and maybe 3-5% on the second.

    The likleyhood of the OP benefiting (IF he needs to upgrade soon, which is not a given) from holding off and spending twice as much to get into AM5 vs just going with a faster Alderlake DDR4 setup now is near zero.

    You remind me of the kind of people that were drooling over PCIe 4.0 SSDs... that you as an end user will literally never see any benefit from - and crowing about PCIe 4.0 being some crown jewel for AMD at the time when it provided literally no benefit and no upgrade benefit for the expected life of the machine (since even PCIe 3.0 STILL isnt saturated by a 3090Ti, though it is finally getting close). Just meaningless jibberish and noise that never took into account that the average end user would see zero benefit over the entire life of the machine.



    Hes a troll and always has been. Dont feel bad.
    first off, how is it 'meaningless' when it's factually contradicting what you said, and to direct quote an AMD interview on Tom's Hardware talking with AMD VP David McAffee: 'The official answer from AMD would be these 300- series motherboards are not a supported configuration in our engineering validation coverage matrix. There are potential issues that could be in there that we're simply not aware of at this point in time.' he then later said in the same piece: 'It's certainly something that we're not just leaving on the side and ignoring; we definitely understand there's a vocal part of the community that's passionate about this. And we want to try to do the right thing. So we're still working through it.'

    as far as INTEL supporting chipsets longer than they usually would i gave a somewhat compelling arguement as to why they might, never said they would, and that usually it's best to go with what is normally the case, however with the way things are right now, i can't see them having much success with the 'old way' as a long term strategy considering the current global situation.

    as to your, again, factually incorrect statement regarding power consumption, a stock out of the box 5950X from AMD pulls ~120 watts of power, a stock out of the box 12900k pulls ~240-245 watts of power, as can be seen in the Gamers Nexus review video of the 12900k, with an overclocked 5950x for comparison drawing 'only' 10 more watts than the stock 12900k, since the 12900KS haven't been released it nobody can say what kind of ridiculous power draw they will have but it's guaranteed to be higher than that considering INTEL are touting a clock speed of 5.5GHz single core boost, and lastly regarding this topic, it's a bit disingenuous comparing a 'bottom of the barrel' CPU (12400) which is designed around power efficiency and light workloads, and a mid tier leaning towards high tier CPU (5800x) which is designed around performance more than raw power efficiency, which for reference stock out of the box 5800x is rated at 65 watts, the 12400 is rated similar and is nowhere near the actual performance of a 5800x, your INTEL 'fanboi' is showing here trying to claim otherwise.

    i wasn't aware that 'crushing the competition' was merely being ahead of the similar matched product by 2-3% on average for gaming up to 12% on titles that favour 'your' platform was considered 'crushing', furthermore, AMD utterly shits all over INTEL for both productivity metrics as well as HEDT and server hardware, i mean just look at encoding and decoding metrics for AMD 5000 series vs alder lake, it's not even remotely close for INTEL, and like i said in my post the only way INTEL have 'clawed back' the gaming crown is by pushing their geriatric manufacturing process to its limits, regardless of semantic or technicalities, the smaller process node used by TSMC and by extension AMD has allowed them much better overall performance for a number of years now, that is an indisputable fact, furthermore i only recently updated my INTEL based system to an AMD system, i'm in no way a 'fanboi' as you seem to be claiming, i'm just someone who sees what is good and what is bad, and makes a judgement call based on that information as i suppose i'm in the minority, as you claim, when it comes to understanding hardware spec sheets and what the data means, and it was due to this information that i went with a 5600x over a 5800x based system because i worked out over the course of a year basing what i use my PC for and my current energy bills, i would be using too much electricity with a higher power draw system, and because of that i was able to drop some of the other parts i had decided to buy and get some better quality pieces with the savings, and while this may be anomalous at this particular point in time, it's something that's certainly changing as prices for energy go up, where i live by as much as a 50% increase, because you stated pricing in dollars i'm assuming you're American, so many of these points will be lost on you as your bubble protects you from many of these issues that are plaguing the rest of the world right now, so it's my fault for assuming you understood these issues.

    it's also laughable you trying to compare the M1 chip to anything produced by AMD (TSMC) and INTEL, it's like trying to compare a family car and a sports car and expecting a fair comparison, it's just idiotic.

    as a final statement from me, i agree, nobody knows yet what AM5 and zen 4 is gonna perform like, but if it's 'phase 2' of the zen architecture, looking at how utterly massive the gains were from 1000 series to 5000 series, if the next set of chips are gonna be performing in the same scaling pattern, it's safe to assume that AMD are still gonna be market leaders for years to come, yes RIGHT NOW DDR5 is nowhere worth the price being asked when compared to DDR4 in terms of performance, but the exact same thing happened when DDR3 to DDR4 transition happened, it's a brand new technology that still has growing pains and it won't be worth the cost for the average consumer until at least 12-18 months from now assuming similar maturation levels as previous generations had, as far as what was reported at CES, NOBODY reported anything ground breaking whether that be INTEL, NVIDIA or AMD, hell, for a three quarter hour long presentation NVIDIA spend less than a minute total on TWO GPU launch skus, and historically AMD has never 'raved' about stuff until they can validate it after they were left with egg on their face way back in the early 2010's, so it's just gonna have to a wait and see situation.

    - - - Updated - - -

    Quote Originally Posted by Nerph- View Post
    I'm currently using a Corsair H100i Pro liquid cooling system.

    I'd like to try overclocking, but I wouldn't even know where to begin. I've googled a bit and there are so many guides but with different information... it's all pretty confusing, so any pointers on that would be much appreciated.
    if you have no experience with OC'ing then i highly recommend looking up youtube videos from the bigger tech reviewers and look back at older videos that are talking about your specific hardware (if they have them) because 'modern' OC guides aren't intended for older systems, try and look back at some older articles for your specific hardware and go from there.

  15. #35
    The Unstoppable Force DeltrusDisc's Avatar
    10+ Year Old Account
    Join Date
    Aug 2009
    Location
    Illinois, USA
    Posts
    20,085
    Quote Originally Posted by rogoth View Post
    if was you, personally i would look to flip the mobo/CPU/RAM as a package deal on ebay/facebbok marketplace/craigslist etc and try and recoup much of what was spent on those, with the current market you might even be able to get back ~90% of the cost, i would then invest in an AMD based system, can get really good B550 boards that aren't too expensive, and the 5600X just got a major discount recently so is cheaper now than it has ever been, for productivity workloads AMD is by far the better option over Intel, and while Intel may technically have clawed back the 'gaming crown' from AMD with the alderlake release, it did so with almost no room for expansion, whereas AMD is launching the new 3d vcache CPU(s) soon and an entirely new socket and platform later this year, so because of that i wouldn't be looking at DDR5/alderlake for now, stick with AM4 and DDR4 for the time being and look to improve from that.
    Aren't the B550 boards not really supporting newer AMD CPUs, though?
    "A flower.
    Yes. Upon your return, I will gift you a beautiful flower."

    "Remember. Remember... that we once lived..."

    Quote Originally Posted by mmocd061d7bab8 View Post
    yeh but lava is just very hot water

  16. #36
    Quote Originally Posted by rogoth View Post
    first off, how is it 'meaningless' when it's factually contradicting what you said
    Because it doesnt. its you reading something, and then somehow coming up with a meaning that isn't there. Like, literal delusion.

    and to direct quote an AMD interview on Tom's Hardware talking with AMD VP David McAffee: 'The official answer from AMD would be these 300- series motherboards are not a supported configuration in our engineering validation coverage matrix. There are potential issues that could be in there that we're simply not aware of at this point in time.' he then later said in the same piece: 'It's certainly something that we're not just leaving on the side and ignoring; we definitely understand there's a vocal part of the community that's passionate about this. And we want to try to do the right thing. So we're still working through it.'
    Three years later. Still working on it. Yeah, ok. If/When it materializes, cool. Not holding my breath, and its STILL n ot a selling point.

    I dont understand why you simply CANNOT seem to understand most people do not ever do a drop in CPU replacement. Not ever. Never. Sub 1%. So how long the socket is supported is utterly meaningless because people simply dont upgrade while its relevant.

    as far as INTEL supporting chipsets longer than they usually would i gave a somewhat compelling arguement as to why they might, never said they would, and that usually it's best to go with what is normally the case, however with the way things are right now, i can't see them having much success with the 'old way' as a long term strategy considering the current global situation.
    Not even sure what you're drooling about here, as i claimed absolutely NOTHING about Intel supporting sockets longer. Sockets last two generations, for the most part, going ALLLLLLL the way back to the 2nd Gen Core i-series parts (2500K, etc). Thats all i said they were going to do this time. Raptor Lake is already confirmed to also be socket 1700 and 600-series motherboards are already confirmed for support (via firmware update, likely) of Raptor Lake. Thats two generations. Exaclty like it has been for close to 15 years.

    as to your, again, factually incorrect
    You seem to have literally no concept of what the word "factually" means. Since you have yet to use it correctly.

    statement regarding power consumption, a stock out of the box 5950X from AMD pulls ~120 watts of power,
    lolno. Thats just like saying a stock out of the box 10600K pulls 65W. AMD is just as untruthful with their real TDP as Intel is.

    a stock out of the box 12900k pulls ~240-245 watts of power,
    Did you actually WATCH the video? Because it doesn't pull near that stock. That was overclocked. And there's almost zero point to overclocking because you get like 200mhz all-core, maybe on a good day, and generally have to overvolt the bejezus out of it.

    as can be seen in the Gamers Nexus review video of the 12900k, with an overclocked 5950x for comparison drawing 'only' 10 more watts than the stock 12900k, since the 12900KS haven't been released it nobody can say what kind of ridiculous power draw they will have but it's guaranteed to be higher than that considering INTEL are touting a clock speed of 5.5GHz single core boost, and lastly regarding this topic, it's a bit disingenuous comparing a 'bottom of the barrel' CPU (12400) which is designed around power efficiency and light workloads, and a mid tier leaning towards high tier CPU (5800x) which is designed around performance more than raw power efficiency, which for reference stock out of the box 5800x is rated at 65 watts, the 12400 is rated similar and is nowhere near the actual performance of a 5800x, your INTEL 'fanboi' is showing here trying to claim otherwise.
    .... watch dem goalposts FLLLLLLYYYYYYY

    It is absolutely fair to compare any part to any other when the performance is the same or better. And "the 5800X isnt designed for power efficiency"... neither is the 12400. There's literally ZERO difference in silicon between the cores in the 5600 and 5800... just more of them. There's ZERO difference in the P-cores in the 12400 and 12900K. There not designed differently.

    What kind of clownshoes shit goes on in your brain?

    I might add, you're also wrong, as the 12400 keeps pace with, and outperforms, the 5800 even in productivity tasks. For less than half the price.

    i wasn't aware that 'crushing the competition' was merely being ahead of the similar matched product by 2-3% on average for gaming up to 12% on titles that favour 'your' platform was considered 'crushing',
    Holy shit are you changing the goalposts.

    Im talking about a 12400 equaling or beating the 5800. The actual price equivalent CPU (a 12700) of a 5800 is 30+% faster.

    furthermore, AMD utterly shits all over INTEL for both productivity metrics
    Uh... no. a 12700 (not even the top end SKU) beats every mainstream AMD processor up to and including the 5950X by over 10% in every productivity benchmark.

    as well as HEDT
    No, because Intel actually has new HEDT silicon and AMD does not, still being on 3 year old Threadripper parts.

    and server hardware, i mean just look at encoding and decoding metrics for AMD 5000 series vs alder lake, it's not even remotely close for INTEL,
    .... what? how do you look at charts that show Intel clearly dominating and then claim its the other way around? Are you like.. word dyslexic or something? You swap the names of the Intel parts for the AMD ones?

    Look at all these benchmarks where AMD dominates Intel:
    https://www.techheuristic.com/intel-...lose-to-5900x/

    Oh, wait, not a siingle one. Whoops.

    The server one, though, is true enough, mostly. Intel CPUs are still better for certain types of server processes though (due to additional instruction sets that dont exist on Epyc) but thats rather niche.

    and like i said in my post the only way INTEL have 'clawed back' the gaming crown is by pushing their geriatric manufacturing process to its limits
    Brand new, entirely different process and core architecture that is more transistor dense than TSMCs upcoming 5nm process.... but sure.. "geriatric".

    regardless of semantic or technicalities,
    Its neither, its outright dishonesty on TSMCs part.

    the smaller process node used by TSMC and by extension AMD has allowed them much better overall performance for a number of years now,
    No they haven't. Rocket Lake kept up pretty well with even the 5000 series chips, neck and neck.. at 14nm. Benchmarks are a real thing that have actually been done and they dont support what you're saying at all. More power efficient? Definitely, because Intel's Skylake/14nm process was a power pig. But "overall performance"... nope. Neck and Neck.

    that is an indisputable fact,
    Your delusions that are quite literally NOT supported by any of the testing done or benchmarks recorded are not fact, much less indisputable.

    furthermore i only recently updated my INTEL based system to an AMD system,
    Is there some reason you're capitalizing Intel (which is a proper name, and not an acronym), like those mental deficients that insist on calling Macs MACs? I mean, its kinda funny, tbh.

    i'm in no way a 'fanboi' as you seem to be claiming, i'm just someone who sees what is good and what is bad, and makes a judgement call based on that information as i suppose i'm in the minority, as you claim, when it comes to understanding hardware spec sheets and what the data means, and it was due to this information that i went with a 5600x over a 5800x based system because i worked out over the course of a year basing what i use my PC for and my current energy bills, i would be using too much electricity with a higher power draw system,
    You need to check your math. Even at full potential draw, the cost difference would be about 9$, if your computer was on 24/7 and the CPU was pinned the entire time.

    Cool story though. Definitely doesnt make you look like a clown. And as for "understanding what the specs mean" - if you somehow believe that Zen 3 is remotely on par with Alder Lake.... yeah, apparently not.

    Id like to point out that your choice of a Zen 4 chip over Rocket Lake (11 series) or 10 series chip was a perfectly fine one - at the time, Intel's chips werent blowing up anyone's skirts and no one knew at the time what Alder Lake held in store.

    But the situation that obtained when you built does NOT obtain now. Hell, the 4/8 Core i3 12100 just blew the doors off the 3600G (which IS slightly slower than the X) in both gaming and productivity.

    Not sure what delusion-fueled dreams you've had telling you otherwise, but Zen 3 is NOT better than Alder Lake at anything other than power efficicieny in the top 2 SKUs. And at those SKUs, the 12900K utterly crushes the 5950X, even when it isnt OCed.

    and because of that i was able to drop some of the other parts i had decided to buy and get some better quality pieces with the savings, and while this may be anomalous at this particular point in time, it's something that's certainly changing as prices for energy go up, where i live by as much as a 50% increase, because you stated pricing in dollars i'm assuming you're American, so many of these points will be lost on you as your bubble protects you from many of these issues that are plaguing the rest of the world right now, so it's my fault for assuming you understood these issues.
    ... Energy prices in nearly every first world country are lower on average than the US. I cant speak to 2nd World countries (China, Russia, etc). Even if you were paying 5x as much as i do (unlikely) itd be 50$ a year running balls-out 24/7.

    And if it IS 5x as expensive... seriously look into some solar panels and an inverter to defray some of that cost. Pay for itself in a couple of months.

    it's also laughable you trying to compare the M1 chip to anything produced by AMD (TSMC)
    TSMC is not AMD. TSMC just makes the chips, based on AMD's design.
    TSMC is not Apple. TSMC just makes the chips, based on Apple's design.

    BOTH currently use TSMCs "7nm" process, and the M1 utterly obliterates the Zen 3 chips in its core count range, both in outright performance AND in power draw. The M1 Pro and Max similarly dominate core-count equivalent Intel and AMD chips. (But both AMD and Intel still pull ahead in the 16-core+ zone, for most tasks - albiet at literally 6x the power draw).

    and INTEL, it's like trying to compare a family car and a sports car and expecting a fair comparison, it's just idiotic.
    Well, we agree that you're an idiot, at least.

    Its a perfectly valid commparison, since all three CPUs feature in the same exact markets (laptops, desktops, and production machines). Its not the family cars' fault that it outperforms your needlessly expensive sports car.

    as a final statement from me, i agree, nobody knows yet what AM5 and zen 4 is gonna perform like, but if it's 'phase 2' of the zen architecture, looking at how utterly massive the gains were from 1000 series to 5000 series,
    Which only happened because AMD was still trying to get their memory controllers to function properly. Once they did, generation-on-generation improvements fell right down to industry norms (about 8-15%). Not that that's a bad thing.

    if the next set of chips are gonna be performing in the same scaling pattern,
    They wont, because AMD already fixed the memory controller issues, which was the majority of the giant jump between Zen 1/2 and Zen 3 came from.

    it's safe to assume that AMD are still gonna be market leaders for years to come,
    Right, because Intel is just sitting still. Raptor Lake already confirmed via engineering samples logged into benchmark sites to be about a 10% IPC gain, and more cores across the board, with the 13900 engineering sample being 14 P-cores (28 therads) and 8 E-cores. (And even the i3 having E-cores, which they currently dont in 12th gen) Again, im not saying Zen 4 wont be impressive. We simply dont know. But we already know how giant of a leap Alder Lake was for Intel (~20+% IPC alone), and there are already samples out there of Raptor Lake.

    and historically AMD has never 'raved' about stuff until they can validate it after they were left with egg on their face way back in the early 2010's, so it's just gonna have to a wait and see situation.
    Uhh.. no. Since Zen 1 DIDNT implode on their face, their keynotes of late have been VERY positive spin and crowing about how awesome there stuff is going to be ever since. Even when they have been overprimising and massively under-delivering (6500XT being weaker than a YEARS-old RX 480, lulz - not that nVidia was a lot better with the 3050, which is basically a very marginally faster 1660 TI/SUPER + Tensor and RT cores. I guess it can at least benefit from DLSS.). And when they had good numbers to show, theyve shown them. They showed NOTHING about Zen 4 other than "yeah its coming". And there's a SINGLE Zen 3 3D SKU coming... in June. Seems like that was either a dud or (equally likely, IMO) supply issues are preventing them from taking real advantage of it.

    Anywho, i only ended up replying to you these last two times because other people had quoted you.

    Since you're normally on ignore, barring another quote, ill be going back to ignoring your drivel.

    - - - Updated - - -

    Quote Originally Posted by Nerph- View Post
    I'm currently using a Corsair H100i Pro liquid cooling system.

    I'd like to try overclocking, but I wouldn't even know where to begin. I've googled a bit and there are so many guides but with different information... it's all pretty confusing, so any pointers on that would be much appreciated.
    Itll have to be phone-pics (im not sure if there's a way to capture screenshots of an EFI anyway) but i can show you where the settings are in the ASUS Z390 BIOS.

    My rig is a Strix Z390i - your EFI/BIOS should be nearly identical to mine.

    Ill post those up here a little later when i finally adjourn to my office to do some gaming tonight.

    - - - Updated - - -

    Okay, these are just going to be links, because its just easier for me to link to Google Photos than rehost them somewhere else:

    First off, when you enter the EFI/BIOS (ill just use EFI from here on out, its shorter and more correct these days), youll see this screen:

    https://photos.app.goo.gl/gzhibw9t3VJVJRX46

    Thats the basic EZ Mode EFI screen. Notice down in the bottom right the "Advanced" Button. See here:

    https://photos.app.goo.gl/fByA75Qg6X1Ed9358

    Click that. It should take you to the main "Advanced" screen:

    https://photos.app.goo.gl/ADUab2dnFPXKVUWZ6

    You want to click the AI Tweaker heading there at the top.

    Itll land you here:

    https://photos.app.goo.gl/kC5qcC4LnkXvKAeS7

    My cursor is currently on the XMP settings in that pic. Enable your XMP profile if you haven't previously.
    If you feel like it latter, there's every likleyhood your existing 2666 RAM can be manually overclocked higher. Gains wont be massive but you can play with it later if you want.

    Notice at the bottom, highlighted in red is "CPU Core Ratio"

    The next shot will show that in more detail (just scroll down to that):

    https://photos.app.goo.gl/vRMiTy4NXB7J95k39

    Enable "Sync All Cores" as i have in the screenshot.

    Set the ratio to what you want the speed to be in the first entry ("1 Core Ratio Limit"); since you're syncing them, this is the only one you need to change.

    Its multiples of 100mhz. So the 48 you see here is 4,800Mhz/4.8Ghz.

    Start at say... 4.6 or 4.7 the first time.

    If you scroll down further, youll see this:

    https://photos.app.goo.gl/YPsz27PPmsaeCALQ6

    This is where you adjust voltage. I only undervolt (run at lower than stock voltage) my 8600K because i have a small, constrained case (Mini-ITX - Phanteks Evolv Shift) and a single 120mm AIO to cool it. With your larger 240mm cooler, you shouldn't need to reduce the voltage to keep temps in check. Only worry about this if you cant get the CPU to be stable, which means you might to need to overvolt it.

    Like i said, for now, just leave it stock, and try the CPU all core at 4.6 or 4.7Ghz (46, 47 multiplier).

    Hit the Exit area, and Save Changes and Exit.

    Download Prime 95:

    https://www.mersenne.org/download/

    And run it in torture test for a while. Let it really run. If it crashes, you can try fiddling with the voltage (go up in very small steps.. .02v or so each time, re-run the test, etc, until you get it stable).

    If it is stable at 4.6 or wherever you start.. bump it up, run the test again. If you get to 4.8-5.1, you're fairly well golden unless you really want to get into altering RAM timings and stuff. And if you get it to 4.8 or higher at stock voltage but its unstable, try adding voltage to get it stable (just like before, small increments).

    My experience with my 8600K was basically... set it at 48, it ran fine but a little hot.... then i lowered the voltage and its been stable. It took all of a few minutes.

    Should the same for you. The 8600/9600K were very good overclockers.
    Last edited by Kagthul; 2022-01-11 at 04:39 AM.

  17. #37
    Pit Lord rogoth's Avatar
    10+ Year Old Account
    Join Date
    Feb 2011
    Location
    in the land of killer unicrons
    Posts
    2,474
    Quote Originally Posted by Kagthul View Post
    Because it doesnt. its you reading something, and then somehow coming up with a meaning that isn't there. Like, literal delusion.



    Three years later. Still working on it. Yeah, ok. If/When it materializes, cool. Not holding my breath, and its STILL n ot a selling point.

    I dont understand why you simply CANNOT seem to understand most people do not ever do a drop in CPU replacement. Not ever. Never. Sub 1%. So how long the socket is supported is utterly meaningless because people simply dont upgrade while its relevant.



    Not even sure what you're drooling about here, as i claimed absolutely NOTHING about Intel supporting sockets longer. Sockets last two generations, for the most part, going ALLLLLLL the way back to the 2nd Gen Core i-series parts (2500K, etc). Thats all i said they were going to do this time. Raptor Lake is already confirmed to also be socket 1700 and 600-series motherboards are already confirmed for support (via firmware update, likely) of Raptor Lake. Thats two generations. Exaclty like it has been for close to 15 years.



    You seem to have literally no concept of what the word "factually" means. Since you have yet to use it correctly.



    lolno. Thats just like saying a stock out of the box 10600K pulls 65W. AMD is just as untruthful with their real TDP as Intel is.



    Did you actually WATCH the video? Because it doesn't pull near that stock. That was overclocked. And there's almost zero point to overclocking because you get like 200mhz all-core, maybe on a good day, and generally have to overvolt the bejezus out of it.



    .... watch dem goalposts FLLLLLLYYYYYYY

    It is absolutely fair to compare any part to any other when the performance is the same or better. And "the 5800X isnt designed for power efficiency"... neither is the 12400. There's literally ZERO difference in silicon between the cores in the 5600 and 5800... just more of them. There's ZERO difference in the P-cores in the 12400 and 12900K. There not designed differently.

    What kind of clownshoes shit goes on in your brain?

    I might add, you're also wrong, as the 12400 keeps pace with, and outperforms, the 5800 even in productivity tasks. For less than half the price.



    Holy shit are you changing the goalposts.

    Im talking about a 12400 equaling or beating the 5800. The actual price equivalent CPU (a 12700) of a 5800 is 30+% faster.



    Uh... no. a 12700 (not even the top end SKU) beats every mainstream AMD processor up to and including the 5950X by over 10% in every productivity benchmark.



    No, because Intel actually has new HEDT silicon and AMD does not, still being on 3 year old Threadripper parts.



    .... what? how do you look at charts that show Intel clearly dominating and then claim its the other way around? Are you like.. word dyslexic or something? You swap the names of the Intel parts for the AMD ones?

    Look at all these benchmarks where AMD dominates Intel:
    https://www.techheuristic.com/intel-...lose-to-5900x/

    Oh, wait, not a siingle one. Whoops.

    The server one, though, is true enough, mostly. Intel CPUs are still better for certain types of server processes though (due to additional instruction sets that dont exist on Epyc) but thats rather niche.



    Brand new, entirely different process and core architecture that is more transistor dense than TSMCs upcoming 5nm process.... but sure.. "geriatric".



    Its neither, its outright dishonesty on TSMCs part.



    No they haven't. Rocket Lake kept up pretty well with even the 5000 series chips, neck and neck.. at 14nm. Benchmarks are a real thing that have actually been done and they dont support what you're saying at all. More power efficient? Definitely, because Intel's Skylake/14nm process was a power pig. But "overall performance"... nope. Neck and Neck.



    Your delusions that are quite literally NOT supported by any of the testing done or benchmarks recorded are not fact, much less indisputable.



    Is there some reason you're capitalizing Intel (which is a proper name, and not an acronym), like those mental deficients that insist on calling Macs MACs? I mean, its kinda funny, tbh.



    You need to check your math. Even at full potential draw, the cost difference would be about 9$, if your computer was on 24/7 and the CPU was pinned the entire time.

    Cool story though. Definitely doesnt make you look like a clown. And as for "understanding what the specs mean" - if you somehow believe that Zen 3 is remotely on par with Alder Lake.... yeah, apparently not.

    Id like to point out that your choice of a Zen 4 chip over Rocket Lake (11 series) or 10 series chip was a perfectly fine one - at the time, Intel's chips werent blowing up anyone's skirts and no one knew at the time what Alder Lake held in store.

    But the situation that obtained when you built does NOT obtain now. Hell, the 4/8 Core i3 12100 just blew the doors off the 3600G (which IS slightly slower than the X) in both gaming and productivity.

    Not sure what delusion-fueled dreams you've had telling you otherwise, but Zen 3 is NOT better than Alder Lake at anything other than power efficicieny in the top 2 SKUs. And at those SKUs, the 12900K utterly crushes the 5950X, even when it isnt OCed.



    ... Energy prices in nearly every first world country are lower on average than the US. I cant speak to 2nd World countries (China, Russia, etc). Even if you were paying 5x as much as i do (unlikely) itd be 50$ a year running balls-out 24/7.

    And if it IS 5x as expensive... seriously look into some solar panels and an inverter to defray some of that cost. Pay for itself in a couple of months.



    TSMC is not AMD. TSMC just makes the chips, based on AMD's design.
    TSMC is not Apple. TSMC just makes the chips, based on Apple's design.

    BOTH currently use TSMCs "7nm" process, and the M1 utterly obliterates the Zen 3 chips in its core count range, both in outright performance AND in power draw. The M1 Pro and Max similarly dominate core-count equivalent Intel and AMD chips. (But both AMD and Intel still pull ahead in the 16-core+ zone, for most tasks - albiet at literally 6x the power draw).



    Well, we agree that you're an idiot, at least.

    Its a perfectly valid commparison, since all three CPUs feature in the same exact markets (laptops, desktops, and production machines). Its not the family cars' fault that it outperforms your needlessly expensive sports car.



    Which only happened because AMD was still trying to get their memory controllers to function properly. Once they did, generation-on-generation improvements fell right down to industry norms (about 8-15%). Not that that's a bad thing.



    They wont, because AMD already fixed the memory controller issues, which was the majority of the giant jump between Zen 1/2 and Zen 3 came from.



    Right, because Intel is just sitting still. Raptor Lake already confirmed via engineering samples logged into benchmark sites to be about a 10% IPC gain, and more cores across the board, with the 13900 engineering sample being 14 P-cores (28 therads) and 8 E-cores. (And even the i3 having E-cores, which they currently dont in 12th gen) Again, im not saying Zen 4 wont be impressive. We simply dont know. But we already know how giant of a leap Alder Lake was for Intel (~20+% IPC alone), and there are already samples out there of Raptor Lake.



    Uhh.. no. Since Zen 1 DIDNT implode on their face, their keynotes of late have been VERY positive spin and crowing about how awesome there stuff is going to be ever since. Even when they have been overprimising and massively under-delivering (6500XT being weaker than a YEARS-old RX 480, lulz - not that nVidia was a lot better with the 3050, which is basically a very marginally faster 1660 TI/SUPER + Tensor and RT cores. I guess it can at least benefit from DLSS.). And when they had good numbers to show, theyve shown them. They showed NOTHING about Zen 4 other than "yeah its coming". And there's a SINGLE Zen 3 3D SKU coming... in June. Seems like that was either a dud or (equally likely, IMO) supply issues are preventing them from taking real advantage of it.

    Anywho, i only ended up replying to you these last two times because other people had quoted you.

    Since you're normally on ignore, barring another quote, ill be going back to ignoring your drivel.

    - - - Updated - - -



    Itll have to be phone-pics (im not sure if there's a way to capture screenshots of an EFI anyway) but i can show you where the settings are in the ASUS Z390 BIOS.

    My rig is a Strix Z390i - your EFI/BIOS should be nearly identical to mine.

    Ill post those up here a little later when i finally adjourn to my office to do some gaming tonight.

    - - - Updated - - -

    Okay, these are just going to be links, because its just easier for me to link to Google Photos than rehost them somewhere else:

    First off, when you enter the EFI/BIOS (ill just use EFI from here on out, its shorter and more correct these days), youll see this screen:

    https://photos.app.goo.gl/gzhibw9t3VJVJRX46

    Thats the basic EZ Mode EFI screen. Notice down in the bottom right the "Advanced" Button. See here:

    https://photos.app.goo.gl/fByA75Qg6X1Ed9358

    Click that. It should take you to the main "Advanced" screen:

    https://photos.app.goo.gl/ADUab2dnFPXKVUWZ6

    You want to click the AI Tweaker heading there at the top.

    Itll land you here:

    https://photos.app.goo.gl/kC5qcC4LnkXvKAeS7

    My cursor is currently on the XMP settings in that pic. Enable your XMP profile if you haven't previously.
    If you feel like it latter, there's every likleyhood your existing 2666 RAM can be manually overclocked higher. Gains wont be massive but you can play with it later if you want.

    Notice at the bottom, highlighted in red is "CPU Core Ratio"

    The next shot will show that in more detail (just scroll down to that):

    https://photos.app.goo.gl/vRMiTy4NXB7J95k39

    Enable "Sync All Cores" as i have in the screenshot.

    Set the ratio to what you want the speed to be in the first entry ("1 Core Ratio Limit"); since you're syncing them, this is the only one you need to change.

    Its multiples of 100mhz. So the 48 you see here is 4,800Mhz/4.8Ghz.

    Start at say... 4.6 or 4.7 the first time.

    If you scroll down further, youll see this:

    https://photos.app.goo.gl/YPsz27PPmsaeCALQ6

    This is where you adjust voltage. I only undervolt (run at lower than stock voltage) my 8600K because i have a small, constrained case (Mini-ITX - Phanteks Evolv Shift) and a single 120mm AIO to cool it. With your larger 240mm cooler, you shouldn't need to reduce the voltage to keep temps in check. Only worry about this if you cant get the CPU to be stable, which means you might to need to overvolt it.

    Like i said, for now, just leave it stock, and try the CPU all core at 4.6 or 4.7Ghz (46, 47 multiplier).

    Hit the Exit area, and Save Changes and Exit.

    Download Prime 95:

    https://www.mersenne.org/download/

    And run it in torture test for a while. Let it really run. If it crashes, you can try fiddling with the voltage (go up in very small steps.. .02v or so each time, re-run the test, etc, until you get it stable).

    If it is stable at 4.6 or wherever you start.. bump it up, run the test again. If you get to 4.8-5.1, you're fairly well golden unless you really want to get into altering RAM timings and stuff. And if you get it to 4.8 or higher at stock voltage but its unstable, try adding voltage to get it stable (just like before, small increments).

    My experience with my 8600K was basically... set it at 48, it ran fine but a little hot.... then i lowered the voltage and its been stable. It took all of a few minutes.

    Should the same for you. The 8600/9600K were very good overclockers.
    i have never heard of this website 'techheuristic' before, the first set of images are taken from a different website with the only hardware known for the benchmarks they have being whatever the CPU is as listed, and a 6900XT GPU, nowhere does it state the actual test setup used so the results are quite literally meaningless, to coin your wording, furthermore, a single page of cinebench R32 is NOT representative of real performance nor is it even remotely helpful when comparing CPU's, it's used as a one off benchmark because of historical reasons, the old R15 was completely removed from any and all comparisons a long time ago, it's only a matter of time before this iteration is axed, so again, not really understanding how you came to your conclusions based on such inaccurate information.

    'DiD YoU eVeN WaTcH tHe ViDeO?', yes, and you clearly cannot read, whenever GN uses the word STOCK next to a power consumption slide for CPU comparisons, that's what it drew for them out of the box with no alterations, meaning, based on the GN testing only (since it's the video i referenced), his power draw chart shows a 12700k pulling 158.4 watts of power STOCK, and the 12900k pulling 243.6 watts of power STOCK, the 5950x OC given is shown in the slide as 1.343v SET/1.275 GET which drew 253.2 watts total power, GN NEVER overclocks a new CPU when doing reviews, clearly you have never watched any of his videos or you would know this, so where you're getting this notion that the INTEL CPU's tested are 'overclocked' from, i will never know.

    i'm not even going to bother addressing your other bullshit spewed in here, because quite honestly i'm going to bed and i'm too tired to try and keep up with your utterly moronic mental gymnastics, the only data you linked is not only flawed, it's also wrong on it's own website, on one of the slides they pulled from techspot.com they have annotated it with the comment:
    'In Corona renderer, the Core i7-12700KF has defeated 5800X by a considerable margin. Here, 12700KF delivers 30% more performance over 5800X and is only 9% slower than Ryzen 9 5900X.'

    yet the chart they are talking about shows the R7 5800X ABOVE the 12700KF with the annotation on the slide *HIGHER IS BETTER*, so which is it?, the INTEL chip is better because they said it was, or the AMD chip is better because the graph shows it is, you can't have both, if you're going to try and use 'data' to back up your arguement, at least use a reputable fucking source that knows what the fuck it's talking about because by extension they have made you look every bit the clown you appear to be, enjoy trying to spin that one to suit your narrative, maybe send them an email pointing out their clear and obvious mistake?

  18. #38
    Fluffy Kitten Nerph-'s Avatar
    15+ Year Old Account
    Join Date
    Sep 2008
    Location
    Belgium
    Posts
    8,760
    Thanks for the write-up Kagthul. I guess the tedious part of overclocking is the stress testing part. I imagine you want to run Prime95 for a few hours at least, from what I've read via google, like 12+ hours for certainty?

    Either way, I appreciate the help and I'll give it a go!

  19. #39
    Quote Originally Posted by Nerph- View Post
    Will I need DDR5 ram with the Zen 4 (AM5) CPU's? Or will there be motherboards that use DDR4?
    AMD was very specific with the wordings:

    * ZEN4 will have DDR5 support (unlikely a hybrid DDR4/DDR5 controller like Intel is using)
    * AM5 will have PCI-E 5.0

    The later one is the strange one from the announcements, so while AM5 will have at SOME POINT IN TIME PCI-E 5.0 support (storage, GPU, PCH or all of them?!?), they worded it very unspecific, so ZEN4 will either have none because PCI-E 5.0 is pretty expensive and AMD without the OEM market has to gauge the DIY budget much better as Intel or they will include parts of PCI-E 5.0 with each new CPU gen every ~1.5-2 years.

    @Topic
    I dont see a huge plus with AM4/AM5 lasting duration either. Its nice for coolers, but when I build a new 2000-3000€ PC, I honestly just get a new cooler with new fans and if you get low-budget CPUs, the kit coolers are included and again usefull for both brands so even the cooler topic with AM4/AM5 vs Intel sockets doesnt matter that much.

    All I see with AM4 how silly people choose AMD with intended CPU upgrades in their mind and are now stuck with a single M2 slot, poorly designed VRMs that brown out with STOCK running R5-R9 CPUs (B450 included), because the boards were targeted at low budget systems and the manufacturers cut every corner possible.

    So they go ahead, get the 300-400€ ZEN3 CPUs, that will kill the trash mainboards in a few months/years while getting not even one feature that made it to mainstream by now - multiple M2's instead of SATA, much better WiFi chips, much better ethernet chips, lots of improvement in RAM tracing and gigantic VRM designs that are able to output 300-400W without a heatsink - thats longetivity.
    Last edited by Ange; 2022-01-11 at 08:57 AM.
    -

  20. #40
    The Unstoppable Force Gaidax's Avatar
    10+ Year Old Account
    Join Date
    Sep 2013
    Location
    Israel
    Posts
    20,780
    All I know from my standpoint is that I will be upgrading I7-9700k probably with either 13th gen or 14th gen.

    Alder Lake looks really good and 9700k being only 8 cores no HT always tilted me, but it's still a mostly pointless upgrade for me because I'm not really that much of a CPU capped for whatever I do at the moment with my gaming rig. Or rather, I am, but what does it matter if FPS is already triple digit anyway for stuff I usually play.

    So dumping ~$1k+ on upgrading already good performance is not the best plan. Thus 13th/14th gen it is when hopefully there will be more modern stuff that actually would need that extra power.

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •