Is 3600 MHz and CL16 worth it for Intel too or mostly just for AMD?
Most options here have either high frequency or good timings, not both
Mostly AMD, and 3600MHZ for them is the sweet spot.
That being said, it certainly can't hurt your system, and there will be performance gains from it (however slight). If you're okay with spending that much you probably won't have buyers remorse, just remember to enable XMP in the BIOS otherwise all those megahertz are wasted.
jungleroomx on
+3
ElldrenIs a woman dammitceterum censeoRegistered Userregular
onboard graphics used to be basically guaranteed but in recent years I've noticed they're no longer always there by default. Double check your CPU has them, especially if it's newer.
Most intel chips still have them. AMD cpus not so much
I thought I noticed integrated graphics being stripped out of new Intel cpus unless you paid an extra markup last year
I mean theoretically yes that’s the function of the F series.
But practically it isn’t because there’s so much less supply of F series cpus
fuck gendered marketing
0
ElldrenIs a woman dammitceterum censeoRegistered Userregular
Is 3600 MHz and CL16 worth it for Intel too or mostly just for AMD?
Most options here have either high frequency or good timings, not both
Mostly AMD, and 3600MHZ for them is the sweet spot.
That being said, it certainly can't hurt your system, and there will be performance gains from it (however slight). If you're okay with spending that much you probably won't have buyers remorse, just remember to enable XMP in the BIOS otherwise all those megahertz are wasted.
Also enabling XMP might void your warranty for an Intel cpu. That’s in the fine print of a lot of Intel warranties
Make my PC a fucking wind tunnel I give not a shit
I used to feel this way, but I built my current system about a year ago and still get surprised every time I boot up the old computer. How did I live that way for so long?
The new system sits in a Meshify 2 on my desk (because RGB) so it's really not that far from my ears but is functionally silent compared to the wind tunnel that was my old computer which sat on he floor and was on the other side of my desk and inside an R3 which has sound deadening pads.
Finally rebuilding my rig, and goodness how things have changed in the past 8/9 years!
So I guess it's all about AMD now? Logical Increments even removed all recommendations for Intel CPUs from their lists
Is there nothing to gain from going with Intel anymore?
Availability is what you gain by going with Intel. They're generally more power-hungry, slower, and have fewer cores. Lack of availability/scalping/etc. has increased AMD's effective price a fair bit, though I'm not sure if it's at parity yet.
Yeah.
Intel certainly hasn't let go of their consumer-unfriendliness, as exemplified just a few posts up by XMP voiding the chips warranty (which I didn't know still existed).
+3
GnomeTankWhat the what?Portland, OregonRegistered Userregular
The 10900K is still a great CPU, it didn't become worse because the Ryzen 5000 series released. It's especially good because you can actually buy one and a motherboard to put it on.
Lo, have I cast mine eyes upon the devastated wasteland wrought by the scourges of COVID-19, Bitcoin, and Ethereum.
Current availability is nice, since there's a baby on the way and I'd like to get a new system set up before the baby lands.
I'm actually looking at the 10600K (or maybe a 10700K?), with the hope that it will last me another 8/9 years. I figure I'll keep my 1070 for now and just swap that out in the future.
Is 3600 MHz and CL16 worth it for Intel too or mostly just for AMD?
Most options here have either high frequency or good timings, not both
Mostly AMD, and 3600MHZ for them is the sweet spot.
That being said, it certainly can't hurt your system, and there will be performance gains from it (however slight). If you're okay with spending that much you probably won't have buyers remorse, just remember to enable XMP in the BIOS otherwise all those megahertz are wasted.
Also enabling XMP might void your warranty for an Intel cpu. That’s in the fine print of a lot of Intel warranties
That little warranty clause is such a petty thing to do.
There's little functional difference for gaming between a 5600x, 5800x, or 5900x. Sure, there are some minor framerate differences here and there, but all of them are just fucking phenomenal gaming processors. As such, I feel like the only reason to go bigger than a 5600x is if you need the extra processing power for tasks like content creation. If you don't, you might as well get the lower TDP part and shave a bit off your power bill.
There's little functional difference for gaming between a 5600x, 5800x, or 5900x. Sure, there are some minor framerate differences here and there, but all of them are just fucking phenomenal gaming processors. As such, I feel like the only reason to go bigger than a 5600x is if you need the extra processing power for tasks like content creation. If you don't, you might as well get the lower TDP part and shave a bit off your power bill.
I figure at least matching the core/thread count of the new generation of consoles will be good.
There's little functional difference for gaming between a 5600x, 5800x, or 5900x. Sure, there are some minor framerate differences here and there, but all of them are just fucking phenomenal gaming processors. As such, I feel like the only reason to go bigger than a 5600x is if you need the extra processing power for tasks like content creation. If you don't, you might as well get the lower TDP part and shave a bit off your power bill.
I feel like I made a mistake going from a 3600 to a 5600x....but I cant cancel an order from AMD and fuck it, havent been able to get anything else.
There's little functional difference for gaming between a 5600x, 5800x, or 5900x. Sure, there are some minor framerate differences here and there, but all of them are just fucking phenomenal gaming processors. As such, I feel like the only reason to go bigger than a 5600x is if you need the extra processing power for tasks like content creation. If you don't, you might as well get the lower TDP part and shave a bit off your power bill.
I figure at least matching the core/thread count of the new generation of consoles will be good.
There's little functional difference for gaming between a 5600x, 5800x, or 5900x. Sure, there are some minor framerate differences here and there, but all of them are just fucking phenomenal gaming processors. As such, I feel like the only reason to go bigger than a 5600x is if you need the extra processing power for tasks like content creation. If you don't, you might as well get the lower TDP part and shave a bit off your power bill.
I feel like I made a mistake going from a 3600 to a 5600x....but I cant cancel an order from AMD and fuck it, havent been able to get anything else.
There's little functional difference for gaming between a 5600x, 5800x, or 5900x. Sure, there are some minor framerate differences here and there, but all of them are just fucking phenomenal gaming processors. As such, I feel like the only reason to go bigger than a 5600x is if you need the extra processing power for tasks like content creation. If you don't, you might as well get the lower TDP part and shave a bit off your power bill.
I figure at least matching the core/thread count of the new generation of consoles will be good.
Yeah, I was worried about 6 cores being outdated.
Honestly it's not going to be a factor until late in the current console cycle. It's been almost 10 years between builds for me, so that's something that factors in for my parts decisions. If I thought I would maybe upgrade the CPU in under that amount of time 6 cores would be perfectly fine.
And chances are it won't even matter that much at all, and if it does, then you can probably still grab a 5800x or 5900x down the line for cheaper and slot it right in. In the meantime you'll have enjoyed the hell out of your 5600x
There's little functional difference for gaming between a 5600x, 5800x, or 5900x. Sure, there are some minor framerate differences here and there, but all of them are just fucking phenomenal gaming processors. As such, I feel like the only reason to go bigger than a 5600x is if you need the extra processing power for tasks like content creation. If you don't, you might as well get the lower TDP part and shave a bit off your power bill.
I feel like I made a mistake going from a 3600 to a 5600x....but I cant cancel an order from AMD and fuck it, havent been able to get anything else.
There's little functional difference for gaming between a 5600x, 5800x, or 5900x. Sure, there are some minor framerate differences here and there, but all of them are just fucking phenomenal gaming processors. As such, I feel like the only reason to go bigger than a 5600x is if you need the extra processing power for tasks like content creation. If you don't, you might as well get the lower TDP part and shave a bit off your power bill.
I figure at least matching the core/thread count of the new generation of consoles will be good.
Yeah, I was worried about 6 cores being outdated.
I'd just wait until mid year and see if they launch XT versions and grab a 5800x/5900x. If you're going to go up might as well get some cores out of it.
Tom's Hardware says Trident Z Neo RAM is 44mm high.
The Dark Rock Pro 4 shows clearances as follows:
Depending on where the RAM sits on your motherboard, that looks like it might be a problem if you use fans in a push-pull configuration. If you've only got one fan, it looks like you might be able to place it so it doesn't impinge on the RAM.
So confusing. Be Quiet! website actually shows that ram in the drp4 product picture, but it looks like a mockup. I saw a post on pcpartpicker that said he had 2mm of clearance in his completed build. I was just going to roll with that, but I hadn't considered that the mobo might change the math. I'm never going to end up buying anything at this rate.
There's little functional difference for gaming between a 5600x, 5800x, or 5900x. Sure, there are some minor framerate differences here and there, but all of them are just fucking phenomenal gaming processors. As such, I feel like the only reason to go bigger than a 5600x is if you need the extra processing power for tasks like content creation. If you don't, you might as well get the lower TDP part and shave a bit off your power bill.
I feel like I made a mistake going from a 3600 to a 5600x....but I cant cancel an order from AMD and fuck it, havent been able to get anything else.
There's little functional difference for gaming between a 5600x, 5800x, or 5900x. Sure, there are some minor framerate differences here and there, but all of them are just fucking phenomenal gaming processors. As such, I feel like the only reason to go bigger than a 5600x is if you need the extra processing power for tasks like content creation. If you don't, you might as well get the lower TDP part and shave a bit off your power bill.
I figure at least matching the core/thread count of the new generation of consoles will be good.
Yeah, I was worried about 6 cores being outdated.
I'd just wait until mid year and see if they launch XT versions and grab a 5800x/5900x. If you're going to go up might as well get some cores out of it.
Can't cancel an order from AMD apparently. Lesson learned, make sure you know what you are buying before you order from them.
Just gotta decide if I want to keep the CPU, or deal with CS trying to get a return.
Ug, the gaming pc I built just a month ago and didn't order, is now $300+ more. -sadface-
I'm looking to get a good cpu+mobo+case+psu first and formost.
I'm stuck between a AMD Ryzen 5 5600X vs AMD Ryzen 7 3700X.
I'm looking for the better gaming cpu, and electricity consumtion is important too. (monthly savings add up).
From what I've read, for gaming, the 5600x uses less electricity for the same fps, or am I getting that wrong?
Someone I saw bought a prebuilt 3070 pc for only $1200, and sold the pc minus gpu for $900. Lucky them.
Will a dark rock pro 4 have clearance issues with trident z neo ram? And if it does fit, will any of the rgb be visible?
I installed a DRP4 with 64GB of Trident Neo ram last year, so I am uniquely qualified to answer!
Yes the ram will clear, but you'll need to install the RAM before the cooler goes on. Also, the fan will need to be mounted up a few mm to clear the second DIMM slot. The RAM is kinda visible? But it's mostly covered by the fan.
See attached photos.
Between you and me, Peggy, I smoked this Juul and it did UNTHINKABLE things to my mind and body...
My motherboard is going. It was an ASUS ROG Crosshair 8 Hero. It lasted 2.5 years and is still under warranty.
what are the signs of a mobo going? just curious as i'm always second guessing everything else before the mobo.
The motherboard can be a culprit or not for just about anything, which is why the standard procedure is to not identify the motherboard as a problem but to rule out literally everything else.
Reseat the GPU, reseat the RAM, drop to one RAM stick, swap out the PSU, strip down unnecessary components, ..... dammit, swap out the CPU? Find another GPU?
It starts to get very painful and prohibitive depending on what you have kicking around, or what your friends maybe have to loan ya for swaps, but eventually you get it working and isolate/replace a component, or you give up and try replacing the motherboard.
Will a dark rock pro 4 have clearance issues with trident z neo ram? And if it does fit, will any of the rgb be visible?
I installed a DRP4 with 64GB of Trident Neo ram last year, so I am uniquely qualified to answer!
Yes the ram will clear, but you'll need to install the RAM before the cooler goes on. Also, the fan will need to be mounted up a few mm to clear the second DIMM slot. The RAM is kinda visible? But it's mostly covered by the fan.
See attached photos.
That 4x Trident Neo is sexy, I almost wanted to go 4 sticks just for the looks myself.
So when I last built my own system Samsung Evos were pretty much what you wanted for SSDs. Have NVME M.2s changed that any? Is Samsung still the best choice, or are there other competitive brands now?
EDIT: People put heatsinks on their M.2s?!
Akilae on
0
syndalisGetting ClassyOn the WallRegistered User, Loves Apple Productsregular
So when I last built my own system Samsung Evos were pretty much what you wanted for SSDs. Have NVME M.2s changed that any? Is Samsung still the best choice, or are there other competitive brands now?
EDIT: People put heatsinks on their M.2s?!
These drives, ESPECIALLY PCIe 4.0, get super hot. Like, throttle/shut down your PC hot.
So yeah, thermal tape, heatsinks, the whole thing.
Lots of modern motherboards have them built in.
SW-4158-3990-6116
Let's play Mario Kart or something...
+7
BouwsTWanna come to a super soft birthday party?Registered Userregular
So when I last built my own system Samsung Evos were pretty much what you wanted for SSDs. Have NVME M.2s changed that any? Is Samsung still the best choice, or are there other competitive brands now?
EDIT: People put heatsinks on their M.2s?!
I've had great success with my Corsair MP600, and installed some XPG M.2's on friend's machines which were absolutely killer, much better performance/$ than Samsungs Evo 970 at the time of purchase. Samsung is still my fav for migrating data and rock-solid performance, but they are not necessary by any stretch on a new machine IMHO.
Also, yes, especially PCIe 4.0, you will ABSOLUTELY want a heatsink. EDIT: Ya, just like syndalis said.
BouwsT on
Between you and me, Peggy, I smoked this Juul and it did UNTHINKABLE things to my mind and body...
Samsung's not really the only game in town for SSDs, but still makes a great product. I went with a 1TB Sabrent Rocket TLC NVMe4 as a top-of-the-line boot drive, and grabbed this 2TB Crucial P5 on a reasonable sale to serve as a media drive.
So I was about to just suck it up and buy the MSI x570 Unify from Newegg because I noticed it was in stock. I'd decided on the Tomahawk, but lolnostock, and I'd even decided Fuck Newegg because of their bullshit lately, but I had a moment of weakness and figured, well Newegg has a Unify in stock at MSRP.
But on a whim I checked the Tomahawk stock tracker for Newegg. Oh, they got some in stock today! Go to check it out and...The entire stock was bought and relisted by a 3rd party seller above MSRP.
Samsung isn't the only game in town anymore. They no longer have a stranglehold on good controller chips, which is what made their SSDs so much better than other brands.
Posts
Mostly AMD, and 3600MHZ for them is the sweet spot.
That being said, it certainly can't hurt your system, and there will be performance gains from it (however slight). If you're okay with spending that much you probably won't have buyers remorse, just remember to enable XMP in the BIOS otherwise all those megahertz are wasted.
I mean theoretically yes that’s the function of the F series.
But practically it isn’t because there’s so much less supply of F series cpus
Also enabling XMP might void your warranty for an Intel cpu. That’s in the fine print of a lot of Intel warranties
I used to feel this way, but I built my current system about a year ago and still get surprised every time I boot up the old computer. How did I live that way for so long?
The new system sits in a Meshify 2 on my desk (because RGB) so it's really not that far from my ears but is functionally silent compared to the wind tunnel that was my old computer which sat on he floor and was on the other side of my desk and inside an R3 which has sound deadening pads.
So I guess it's all about AMD now? Logical Increments even removed all recommendations for Intel CPUs from their lists
Is there nothing to gain from going with Intel anymore?
Yeah.
Intel certainly hasn't let go of their consumer-unfriendliness, as exemplified just a few posts up by XMP voiding the chips warranty (which I didn't know still existed).
But I managed to place an order for a 5600x on AMDs site itself.
Maybe I should of gone for the 5800x? I want to got 144 at 1440p at some point...
Current availability is nice, since there's a baby on the way and I'd like to get a new system set up before the baby lands.
I'm actually looking at the 10600K (or maybe a 10700K?), with the hope that it will last me another 8/9 years. I figure I'll keep my 1070 for now and just swap that out in the future.
That little warranty clause is such a petty thing to do.
5600x more than fine for gaming and whatever graphics targets, it's gonna be all about which GPU you grab.
I figure at least matching the core/thread count of the new generation of consoles will be good.
Sigh.....
I feel like I made a mistake going from a 3600 to a 5600x....but I cant cancel an order from AMD and fuck it, havent been able to get anything else.
Yeah, I was worried about 6 cores being outdated.
Honestly it's not going to be a factor until late in the current console cycle. It's been almost 10 years between builds for me, so that's something that factors in for my parts decisions. If I thought I would maybe upgrade the CPU in under that amount of time 6 cores would be perfectly fine.
And chances are it won't even matter that much at all, and if it does, then you can probably still grab a 5800x or 5900x down the line for cheaper and slot it right in. In the meantime you'll have enjoyed the hell out of your 5600x
I'd just wait until mid year and see if they launch XT versions and grab a 5800x/5900x. If you're going to go up might as well get some cores out of it.
So confusing. Be Quiet! website actually shows that ram in the drp4 product picture, but it looks like a mockup. I saw a post on pcpartpicker that said he had 2mm of clearance in his completed build. I was just going to roll with that, but I hadn't considered that the mobo might change the math. I'm never going to end up buying anything at this rate.
Can't cancel an order from AMD apparently. Lesson learned, make sure you know what you are buying before you order from them.
Just gotta decide if I want to keep the CPU, or deal with CS trying to get a return.
I'm looking to get a good cpu+mobo+case+psu first and formost.
I'm stuck between a AMD Ryzen 5 5600X vs AMD Ryzen 7 3700X.
I'm looking for the better gaming cpu, and electricity consumtion is important too. (monthly savings add up).
From what I've read, for gaming, the 5600x uses less electricity for the same fps, or am I getting that wrong?
Someone I saw bought a prebuilt 3070 pc for only $1200, and sold the pc minus gpu for $900. Lucky them.
what are the signs of a mobo going? just curious as i'm always second guessing everything else before the mobo.
Blizzard: Pailryder#1101
GoG: https://www.gog.com/u/pailryder
I installed a DRP4 with 64GB of Trident Neo ram last year, so I am uniquely qualified to answer!
Yes the ram will clear, but you'll need to install the RAM before the cooler goes on. Also, the fan will need to be mounted up a few mm to clear the second DIMM slot. The RAM is kinda visible? But it's mostly covered by the fan.
See attached photos.
The motherboard can be a culprit or not for just about anything, which is why the standard procedure is to not identify the motherboard as a problem but to rule out literally everything else.
Reseat the GPU, reseat the RAM, drop to one RAM stick, swap out the PSU, strip down unnecessary components, ..... dammit, swap out the CPU? Find another GPU?
It starts to get very painful and prohibitive depending on what you have kicking around, or what your friends maybe have to loan ya for swaps, but eventually you get it working and isolate/replace a component, or you give up and try replacing the motherboard.
That 4x Trident Neo is sexy, I almost wanted to go 4 sticks just for the looks myself.
Step 1 is to make sure that the chipset on your board allows you to "overclock" the memory so high.
EDIT: People put heatsinks on their M.2s?!
These drives, ESPECIALLY PCIe 4.0, get super hot. Like, throttle/shut down your PC hot.
So yeah, thermal tape, heatsinks, the whole thing.
Lots of modern motherboards have them built in.
Let's play Mario Kart or something...
I've had great success with my Corsair MP600, and installed some XPG M.2's on friend's machines which were absolutely killer, much better performance/$ than Samsungs Evo 970 at the time of purchase. Samsung is still my fav for migrating data and rock-solid performance, but they are not necessary by any stretch on a new machine IMHO.
Also, yes, especially PCIe 4.0, you will ABSOLUTELY want a heatsink. EDIT: Ya, just like syndalis said.
But on a whim I checked the Tomahawk stock tracker for Newegg. Oh, they got some in stock today! Go to check it out and...The entire stock was bought and relisted by a 3rd party seller above MSRP.
So I'm back to my Fuck Newegg stance.
Anyway, MSI x570 Unify in stock at Newegg at MSRP, stocked and shipped by Newegg, if you want.
ADATA
Sabrent
SiliconPower
XPG
Teamgroup
Gskill
Inland
WD
Samsung isn't the only game in town anymore. They no longer have a stranglehold on good controller chips, which is what made their SSDs so much better than other brands.