Armenius
Extremely [H]
- Joined
- Jan 28, 2014
- Messages
- 42,147
SATA and PCI-E lanes for NVMe drives has always come from the chipset, as far as I'm aware.AM5 CPU has no SATA support, it all comes from the chipset.
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SATA and PCI-E lanes for NVMe drives has always come from the chipset, as far as I'm aware.AM5 CPU has no SATA support, it all comes from the chipset.
SATA and PCI-E lanes for NVMe drives has always come from the chipset, as far as I'm aware.
Its going to end up being a "rental" tool like on the car enthusiast forums.Definitely waiting to see the Der8aur delid kit coming in at $100+ or something nuts.
I'll buy one and rent it out.Its going to end up being a "rental" tool like on the car enthusiast forums.
The more these come in the happier I am, but my biggest project will be for next summer’ish. I need to rebuild my Arcade cabinet (it’s falling apart and ugly) and as much as a 5700g would do, something with AVX512 would do better. So I eagerly await the 7000 series equivalent and it better have at least RDNA2 otherwise WTSF is AMD thinking.
On an Wraith Stealth, zero gaming performance lost on a 7600x versus an very high end $290 water cooling AIO:I have very basic understanding of easier of heat transfer, cooling and so on, but should it not be much easier for a cheap cooler to do the job ?
On an Wraith Stealth, zero gaming performance lost on a 7600x versus an very high end $290 water cooling AIO:
On a cinebench R23 scenario, you loose around 8%
Using a wraith spire you loose 96%, so I imagine the lost on a cheap but good tower cooler would be minimal on a $40 Pure rock 2 you are almost there in full thread long almost worst case scenario (98%)
And it is also possible that you do not loose performance only if you let your cooler get really noisy on an cheap one obviously, which is far from a small variable.Just keep in mind that will change depending on the case you're using. Nothing we haven't known since the past 20+ years, but I am going to assume for the typical case a gamer uses a higher end cooler might make a bit more of a difference.
The first 4 PCIe lanes for the top/closest m.2 NVMe slot go directly to the CPU, and everything else is off of the chipset.SATA and PCI-E lanes for NVMe drives has always come from the chipset, as far as I'm aware.
11th gen has PCIe 4.0, except for the Pentium and Celeron CPUs, which are PCIe 3.0 only.Intel's 11th gen is often overlooked I think. Discreer gaming and application benchmarks are closer to the 5800x than the 5700g. It has a descent igpu and power isn't terrible for being on 14nm. Pcie-3.0 is the only real bummer.
On an Wraith Stealth, zero gaming performance lost on a 7600x versus an very high end $290 water cooling AIO:
On a cinebench R23 scenario, you loose around 8%
Using a wraith spire you loose 96%, so I imagine the lost on a cheap but good tower cooler would be minimal on a $40 Pure rock 2 you are almost there in full thread long almost worst case scenario (98%)
Not sure if this was posted here, but it seems the Windows Scheduler may be hurting gaming performance on dual CCX Ryzen 7000 processors.
https://www.pcgamer.com/windows-11-amd-performance-ccd/
Really need to see the boost speeds before one can point the finger at MS. If it’s boosting higher for whatever reason that could be the cause. I totally believe it’s MS thoughDeja vu
Interesting 7950X performance-to-power analysis that no one else has really done.
(For anyone not familiar with BuildZoid, he's one of the rare tech tubers that isn't one - no fluff, no SENSATIONALIZED?!?! video titles or goofy "shocked face" thumbnails to appeal to teenagers. All he cares about is the technicals and drilling down into the numbers. Absolutely love this guy).