Author Topic: AMD Ryzen CPU  (Read 21023 times)

Offline Pudgie

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Re: AMD Ryzen CPU
« Reply #150 on: June 25, 2017, 09:46:19 AM »
Here is provided a snippet of the background setting changes as provided by Microsoft to make in Windows Powercfg.exe to the Balanced Power Plan to improve CPU response time for light to medium loads to achieve close to\the same level CPU performance as would be available using the High Performance Power Plan but still have the ability to reduce CPU power\frequency for power savings if desired.

This will need to be applied thru the Windows Command prompt w\ admin rights.

If you're not comfortable doing this thru the Command prompt then disregard.

 :salute
Win 10 Home 64, AMD Ryzen 9 3900X, MSI MPG X570 Gaming Plus, GSkill FlareX 32Gb DDR4 3200 4x8Gb, XFX Radeon RX 6900X 16Gb, Samsung 950 Pro 512Gb NVMe PCI-E SSD (boot), Samsung 850 Pro 128Gb SATA SSD (pagefile), Creative SoundBlaster X7 DAC-AMP, Intel LAN, SeaSonic PRIME Gold 850W, all CLWC'd

Offline Pudgie

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Re: AMD Ryzen CPU
« Reply #151 on: June 25, 2017, 09:39:33 PM »
Also some of Ryzen CPU's smoothness (this 1800X for sure) may be attributted to the SenseMI technology built in these CPU's...........

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uZRih6APtiQ

IMHO, this doesn't get enough coverage or notice as to it's effects on the computing experience.

 :salute
Win 10 Home 64, AMD Ryzen 9 3900X, MSI MPG X570 Gaming Plus, GSkill FlareX 32Gb DDR4 3200 4x8Gb, XFX Radeon RX 6900X 16Gb, Samsung 950 Pro 512Gb NVMe PCI-E SSD (boot), Samsung 850 Pro 128Gb SATA SSD (pagefile), Creative SoundBlaster X7 DAC-AMP, Intel LAN, SeaSonic PRIME Gold 850W, all CLWC'd

Offline Pudgie

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Re: AMD Ryzen CPU
« Reply #152 on: July 14, 2017, 06:06:42 AM »
Here is a video from Level 1 Techs on the question of Intel vs AMD in gaming using actual game titles in a blind test to note which is better.

Note: This is the kind of testing that I haven't noted anyone else attempting to do.

Enjoy!

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ybF7r4rogHc

 :salute

PS---Here is a followup video on this same subject in a more detailed format...........

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=11NfsMykyAk

Note what Wendell says concerning running his testing using an AMD Fury vid card vs using Nvidia 1080 series..........

Also note what he says about the stuttering captured in GTA V which is a Dx11 coded game.....looks the same as seen running AHIII under Dx11.............

 :salute
« Last Edit: July 14, 2017, 06:45:19 AM by Pudgie »
Win 10 Home 64, AMD Ryzen 9 3900X, MSI MPG X570 Gaming Plus, GSkill FlareX 32Gb DDR4 3200 4x8Gb, XFX Radeon RX 6900X 16Gb, Samsung 950 Pro 512Gb NVMe PCI-E SSD (boot), Samsung 850 Pro 128Gb SATA SSD (pagefile), Creative SoundBlaster X7 DAC-AMP, Intel LAN, SeaSonic PRIME Gold 850W, all CLWC'd

Offline Pudgie

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Re: AMD Ryzen CPU
« Reply #153 on: July 22, 2017, 09:19:32 AM »
Hi Vinkman!

How's it going?

Haven't heard from you in a while.................

Hope all is well.

 :salute
Win 10 Home 64, AMD Ryzen 9 3900X, MSI MPG X570 Gaming Plus, GSkill FlareX 32Gb DDR4 3200 4x8Gb, XFX Radeon RX 6900X 16Gb, Samsung 950 Pro 512Gb NVMe PCI-E SSD (boot), Samsung 850 Pro 128Gb SATA SSD (pagefile), Creative SoundBlaster X7 DAC-AMP, Intel LAN, SeaSonic PRIME Gold 850W, all CLWC'd

Offline Pudgie

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Re: AMD Ryzen CPU
« Reply #154 on: July 24, 2017, 12:28:28 AM »
Update:

Found this little issue in my mobo's UEFI after seeing it pop up randomly for some time (Gigabyte GA-AX370 Gaming K5 using F3c UEFI):

Every blue moon my box would stall during POST in a "locked state", either using the reset button to restart box or cycling power button to restart box would resolve issue, then my box would sometimes randomly hang during POST when performing a restart (warm boot) in which it would power itself off then power itself back on, sometimes a couple of times then start up as if nothing was wrong & not reset the UEFI (all settings were intact).

During a looksee in the UEFI after 1 of these episodes I noticed that when I had the UEFI set to start any storage drives in "UEFI only" (all my SSD's are configured w\ EFI partitions for this purpose & especially my Samsung 950 Pro NVMe PCI-E SSD) that the UEFI would not recognize my Sammy 950 Pro NVMe SSD under Peripherals, NVMe Configuration in my mobo's UEFI....says that no NVME SSD is present...............

That got me to thinking so I ran a test as follows:

I changed the setting under BIOS, Storage Boot Option Control from "UEFI only" to "Legacy only" (left all else as set), saved then went back into UEFI to check this on reboot............now my Samsung 950 Pro 512Gb NVMe PCI-E SSD is recognized & read under Peripherals, NVMe Configuration as well as under BIOS, #1 Boot Order this SSD now shows up in () besides the Windows Boot Manager as it should.

Got out of UEFI & booted into Windows............& I haven't had any more issues from this box!
All bootups are clean w\ no issues, all warm boots are clean w\ no issues............all since making this setting change in UEFI.
Doesn't make sense to me as this should've worked under UEFI only.......unless the ASCII coding is actually backwards in the UEFI...........
 
Oh well, doesn't matter now as since this little issue was resolved this AMD Ryzen 7 1800X\AMD R9 FuryX box is now running absolutely stable & crisp w\o issue.

Gonna look into this w\ Gigabyte to see if this was set up backwards or this storage boot option control needs to stay set for legacy only for proper operation............

FYI....................

 :salute
Win 10 Home 64, AMD Ryzen 9 3900X, MSI MPG X570 Gaming Plus, GSkill FlareX 32Gb DDR4 3200 4x8Gb, XFX Radeon RX 6900X 16Gb, Samsung 950 Pro 512Gb NVMe PCI-E SSD (boot), Samsung 850 Pro 128Gb SATA SSD (pagefile), Creative SoundBlaster X7 DAC-AMP, Intel LAN, SeaSonic PRIME Gold 850W, all CLWC'd

Offline Vinkman

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Re: AMD Ryzen CPU
« Reply #155 on: July 24, 2017, 07:12:58 AM »
Hi Vinkman!

How's it going?

Haven't heard from you in a while.................

Hope all is well.

 :salute

Pudgie,
My rig is running without issues. I haven't been flying that much as I was waiting for my new stick, which arrived last week. Now I need to get back in the virtual sky and practice with them.  :salute
Who is John Galt?

Offline Vinkman

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Re: AMD Ryzen CPU
« Reply #156 on: July 24, 2017, 07:18:36 AM »
Update:

Found this little issue in my mobo's UEFI after seeing it pop up randomly for some time (Gigabyte GA-AX370 Gaming K5 using F3c UEFI):

Every blue moon my box would stall during POST in a "locked state", either using the reset button to restart box or cycling power button to restart box would resolve issue, then my box would sometimes randomly hang during POST when performing a restart (warm boot) in which it would power itself off then power itself back on, sometimes a couple of times then start up as if nothing was wrong & not reset the UEFI (all settings were intact).

During a looksee in the UEFI after 1 of these episodes I noticed that when I had the UEFI set to start any storage drives in "UEFI only" (all my SSD's are configured w\ EFI partitions for this purpose & especially my Samsung 950 Pro NVMe PCI-E SSD) that the UEFI would not recognize my Sammy 950 Pro NVMe SSD under Peripherals, NVMe Configuration in my mobo's UEFI....says that no NVME SSD is present...............

That got me to thinking so I ran a test as follows:

I changed the setting under BIOS, Storage Boot Option Control from "UEFI only" to "Legacy only" (left all else as set), saved then went back into UEFI to check this on reboot............now my Samsung 950 Pro 512Gb NVMe PCI-E SSD is recognized & read under Peripherals, NVMe Configuration as well as under BIOS, #1 Boot Order this SSD now shows up in () besides the Windows Boot Manager as it should.

Got out of UEFI & booted into Windows............& I haven't had any more issues from this box!
All bootups are clean w\ no issues, all warm boots are clean w\ no issues............all since making this setting change in UEFI.
Doesn't make sense to me as this should've worked under UEFI only.......unless the ASCII coding is actually backwards in the UEFI...........
 
Oh well, doesn't matter now as since this little issue was resolved this AMD Ryzen 7 1800X\AMD R9 FuryX box is now running absolutely stable & crisp w\o issue.

Gonna look into this w\ Gigabyte to see if this was set up backwards or this storage boot option control needs to stay set for legacy only for proper operation............

FYI....................

 :salute

Pudgie,
I keep getting this annoying pop up box that tells me that Windows updates can't be performed because my hardware doesn't support it. When I go to the Read more, they tell me I need to upgrade to windows 10.  I don;t want to upgrade to Windows 10.  :neener:
Who is John Galt?

Offline Pudgie

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Re: AMD Ryzen CPU
« Reply #157 on: July 24, 2017, 01:26:45 PM »
Pudgie,
My rig is running without issues. I haven't been flying that much as I was waiting for my new stick, which arrived last week. Now I need to get back in the virtual sky and practice with them.  :salute


Good to hear Vinkman!

When AMD ships out Rx Vega 10 I'm gonna plan to get a Fractal Design Define R5 Silent Blackout Window case then transfer all components to this case then build a closed loop custom watercooled system to cool both the graphics card & CPU.....then I'll call it "finished" for a while..........

Have never built 1 so this will be my 1st.........

 :salute
Win 10 Home 64, AMD Ryzen 9 3900X, MSI MPG X570 Gaming Plus, GSkill FlareX 32Gb DDR4 3200 4x8Gb, XFX Radeon RX 6900X 16Gb, Samsung 950 Pro 512Gb NVMe PCI-E SSD (boot), Samsung 850 Pro 128Gb SATA SSD (pagefile), Creative SoundBlaster X7 DAC-AMP, Intel LAN, SeaSonic PRIME Gold 850W, all CLWC'd

Offline Pudgie

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Re: AMD Ryzen CPU
« Reply #158 on: July 24, 2017, 01:28:19 PM »
Pudgie,
I keep getting this annoying pop up box that tells me that Windows updates can't be performed because my hardware doesn't support it. When I go to the Read more, they tell me I need to upgrade to windows 10.  I don;t want to upgrade to Windows 10.  :neener:

 :noid   :uhoh

 :salute
Win 10 Home 64, AMD Ryzen 9 3900X, MSI MPG X570 Gaming Plus, GSkill FlareX 32Gb DDR4 3200 4x8Gb, XFX Radeon RX 6900X 16Gb, Samsung 950 Pro 512Gb NVMe PCI-E SSD (boot), Samsung 850 Pro 128Gb SATA SSD (pagefile), Creative SoundBlaster X7 DAC-AMP, Intel LAN, SeaSonic PRIME Gold 850W, all CLWC'd

Offline Pudgie

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Re: AMD Ryzen CPU
« Reply #159 on: August 03, 2017, 07:20:32 AM »
Here is another video of my Team Red box (AMD Ryzen 7 1800X CPU\AMD Radeon R9 FuryX vid card) running AHIII Dx11 latest version using Win 10 Game Mode which is applying CPU affinity in Win 10 OS to manually set aside CPU core 4 in the 1st CCX, then CPU cores 5,6 and 7 in the 2nd CCX to use exclusively to process the AHIII game threads on then use Prio to set CPU priority for AHIII to High in Win 10 OS so AHIII game threads will get the highest percentage of CPU core processing time assigned on the CPU cores that any AHIII game threads are assigned to be processed. This setup ensures that AHIII game threads will get the maximum CPU core processing time on the dedicated CPU cores that are assigned to it by the OS so the game will run at it's absolute best under default Win 10 Balanced Power Plan that I modified thru Powercfg.exe to specifically increase CPU core response time under light to medium CPU loads w\ the min processor power % set at 70% to lock the low CPU frequency (clock speed) @ 3.2 Ghz thru AMD's Cool & Quiet CPU power\frequency control enabled in UEFI.

CPU is set up in UEFI in default configuration outside of SMT (simultaneous multithreading technology) being disabled & FuryX is set up in Radeon WattMan in default GPU power\frequency control configuration using Crimson 17.7.2 Global driver settings as attached below. AMD FreeSynch is enabled in Crimson driver as well as in my Asus MG279Q 27" Gaming Monitor using the Asus default monitor drivers which set the FreeSynch range at 35Hz-90Hz which meets the 2.5x threshold for AMD's FreeSynch LFRC (low frame rate compensation) to be enabled in the Crimson driver at 2560 x 1440 res. System mem used is GSkill FlareX 16Gb 8gb x 2 DDR4 3200 CL14 mem kit using the XMP profile SPD settings of 14-14-14-34-1T timings running at 3200 MHz frequency. This mem kit is specifically designed for operation w\ AMD Ryzen CPU's.

AHIII is set up in Video Settings as provided below. The in-game graphics settings are shown in the video.

I provided all this setup info to give context to the real time running data of my box's hardware you will see in the RTSS\HWINFO overlay while AHIII is running on it.

Enjoy!

https://youtu.be/7OugaKPBrxc

 :salute
Win 10 Home 64, AMD Ryzen 9 3900X, MSI MPG X570 Gaming Plus, GSkill FlareX 32Gb DDR4 3200 4x8Gb, XFX Radeon RX 6900X 16Gb, Samsung 950 Pro 512Gb NVMe PCI-E SSD (boot), Samsung 850 Pro 128Gb SATA SSD (pagefile), Creative SoundBlaster X7 DAC-AMP, Intel LAN, SeaSonic PRIME Gold 850W, all CLWC'd

Offline Pudgie

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Re: AMD Ryzen CPU
« Reply #160 on: August 08, 2017, 08:48:40 PM »
Here is another video of my box w\ the AMD Ryzen 7 1800X CPU set up thru the modified Windows Balanced Power Plan running AHIII w\ the CPU frequency locked at 2.2 Ghz w\ all settings set the same as in the prior video w\ the addition of tesselation being enabled & set to AMD Optimized. This setting puts an extra load on the CPU as well as the GPU when in use.

Enjoy!

https://youtu.be/lGTaFc_hpX8

 :salute
Win 10 Home 64, AMD Ryzen 9 3900X, MSI MPG X570 Gaming Plus, GSkill FlareX 32Gb DDR4 3200 4x8Gb, XFX Radeon RX 6900X 16Gb, Samsung 950 Pro 512Gb NVMe PCI-E SSD (boot), Samsung 850 Pro 128Gb SATA SSD (pagefile), Creative SoundBlaster X7 DAC-AMP, Intel LAN, SeaSonic PRIME Gold 850W, all CLWC'd

Offline Adjuster

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Re: AMD Ryzen CPU
« Reply #161 on: August 12, 2017, 09:04:33 PM »
Following advice on the thread I started I have updated my spec (and budiet,  this comes in at $2,340 aussie ) apologies for jumping on this one

Am I getting there ?



AMD Ryzen 7 1700 3.0Ghz 20MB AM4 Retail Box - With Fan
None / Included
Gigabyte AX370-Gaming K3 AM4 ATX Desktop Motherboard
GeIL 16GB Kit (2x8GB) DDR4 SUPER LUCE White (Red LED) C15 3000MHz
WD Green 120GB 2.5" SSD
WD Blue WD20EZRZ 3.5" 2TB 64MB 5400RPM Desktop HDD
Gigabyte GeForce GTX1080 Turbo OC 8GB GDDR5
Integrated - Onboard
GamerChief Essent E101 Mid Tower Case
Corsair RM750x 750W 80PLUS Gold Modular Power Supply
Adjuster

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Offline Pudgie

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Re: AMD Ryzen CPU
« Reply #162 on: August 13, 2017, 03:48:54 AM »
Following advice on the thread I started I have updated my spec (and budiet,  this comes in at $2,340 aussie ) apologies for jumping on this one

Am I getting there ?



AMD Ryzen 7 1700 3.0Ghz 20MB AM4 Retail Box - With Fan
None / Included
Gigabyte AX370-Gaming K3 AM4 ATX Desktop Motherboard
GeIL 16GB Kit (2x8GB) DDR4 SUPER LUCE White (Red LED) C15 3000MHz
WD Green 120GB 2.5" SSD
WD Blue WD20EZRZ 3.5" 2TB 64MB 5400RPM Desktop HDD
Gigabyte GeForce GTX1080 Turbo OC 8GB GDDR5
Integrated - Onboard
GamerChief Essent E101 Mid Tower Case
Corsair RM750x 750W 80PLUS Gold Modular Power Supply

Hi Adjuster,

If I may ask, outside of playing AHIII, what are your planned usages for this setup? Video rendering, content creation, CAD work, etc?
What would be a good ratio of this type of usage vs gaming? Say mostly gaming w\ some of the other items mentioned or mostly the other items w\ some gaming thrown in?

This info would help to give some better recommendations.

But to start off w\ a typical recommendation of what you have provided based on a best balanced approach.

1. The AMD Ryzen 7 1700 CPU is a good CPU to pick if you really want a good value on a 8-core CPU, but a better pick IMHO would be the AMD Ryzen 5 1600 6-core CPU as most games will only use up to 4-6 CPU cores max anyway, regardless of whether AMD\Intel. SMT will allow this CPU to process more than 6 threads (up to 12 if the game\app will make use of them) but this CPU will still do very well w\ the other uses due to the 12 thread capability. Essentially it is a Ryzen 7 1700 clocked slightly higher w\ 2 less cores for less money. If you're gonna be running 1080 res or higher this CPU will be more than enough. This CPU should also come w\ a CPU HSF (Wraith) included. The only difference between the X & non-X models is XFR is enabled w\ the X models & the X models are usually the better binned chips.
2. This Gigabyte GA-AX370 Gaming K3 is a good AM4 mobo as Gigabyte AM4 mobos have been getting good reviews for being well built & stable.....but w\ any AMD AM4 socket mobo, regardless of manufacturer, the very 1st thing you want to do is to check for or flash the UEFI (or BIOS if you prefer) to the latest version for the particular mobo to ensure that the latest AMD AGESA 1.0.0.6a firmware is being used (fixes mem compatibility w\ Ryzen CPU's). This mobo should have the F3 UEFI installed....if not then flash it. This X370 mobo is capable of true overclocking of CPU AND mem (some models will only allow OC to mem so check on this before buying if OC'ing is a preference) so this is covered w\ the Gaming K3 mobo. This mobo only has 2 PCI-E 3.0 x16 slots (to provide 2-way SLI\Crossfire graphics cards) in 8x\8x lane configuration so if you want a single graphics card to have the full 16 lanes DO NOT put anything in the 2nd slot or it will be cut to 8 lanes. This isn't an issue per se as far as graphics card performance goes at the moment but you do need to know this. If you want to install a PCI-E NVMe SSD on this board in the future then use the M.2 slot w\ a M.2 PCI-E SSD or a 2.5" NVMe SSD w\ a U.2\M.2 adapter. If you desire to use an audio interface (external USB sound device) then please use the yellow USB 3.0 slots w\ it as these 2 slots are specifically designed for these devices (Gigabyte USB DAC-UP2) to provide good, clean stable power regulation to a USB DAC-AMP.
3. As far as mem goes, the sweet spot for AMD Ryzen CPU's IMHO is 2667 & up w\ 3200 being the preferred frequency at this time. Any mem past 2667 is essentially OC'd mem (onboard CPU mem controller) & can be a crapshoot to get it working at rated speed....especially IF AMD's AGESA 1.0.0.6a firmware isn't installed in UEFI\BIOS. If you can swing it, get the GSkill FlareX 3200 DDR4 CL14 16Gb 8Gb x 2 mem kit instead as this mem kit was specifically designed for AMD Ryzen CPU's running on AMD X370\B350 chipset mobos & will usually load up using it's XMP SPD settings (14-14-14-34-1T timings @ 3200 frequency) w\o any fiddling. The main reason for faster mem w\ Ryzen is to get the most out of the CPU's Infinity Fabric interconnect performance (interconnect currently runs at 1\2 mem speed) to reduce CPU latency thus speeds up the CPU's processing capabilities. Since the advent of AMD Ryzen 9 Threadripper CPU's there are even better mem kits being available to get to 3600 frequency if desired. The Geil mem you posted should work @ 3000 but most likely only at 2933, which would be OK but get the non-LED version & save money.....unless you really like bling (you did mention that you wasn't interested in LED lighting).
4. As for these 2 drives I won't comment per se (I know TC doesn't like WD drives of any stripe) as I do know if you stick w\ the 16Gb of system mem you should be fine using the SSD as the boot drive (your box shouldn't be paging out to this SSD or even any HDD w\ that much system mem being used for the most part which is the best protection to have when using a SSD drive). I would recommend using a Samsung 850 Pro 2.5" SATA III SSD instead of the WD SSD as these are the best performance-wise at the moment (including longevity). There is some evidence that AHIII could encounter some issues if being run off a SSD but it will depend on which SSD\firmware being used so be aware. I'll defer the recommendation on the HDD to others.
5. The only player I knew that was using a large screen 4K TV as a monitor was Dobs running a Nvidia 980Ti graphics card & according to Dobs he was getting good performance from his setup (I think the TV was 4K @ 60Hz) so in theory a Nvidia 1070 & up should handle this to some acceptable degree, depending on the settings used. IMHO, the 3 things that a user needs to be real about when considering any graphics usage is what is most important, graphics imagery, FPS or both. Then AFTER making this decision 1st, start looking for the associated monitor\TV to use THEN after this is done start looking for the graphics card that can drive it ACCORDING to what you have decided at the start beforehand as this will determine the real costs. If the 4K TV is wanted then the graphics card choices are pretty much already defined......the base card will be the 1080 & up for Nvidia w\ the preference being the 1080Ti or Titan Xp. The only card AMD can put forth at this time is the Fury X which can run 4K @ 60 Hz but not near as well as the current Nvidia cards (you'll have to back off on AA & TF to min settings and reduce some graphics settings as well). If AMD is in the running then it's gonna have to be Rx Vega 10....most likely the AIO liquid-cooled version but I'd wait for the reviews to come out Monday on this card before considering it for 4K usage.
6. Please explain what you mean by "Integrated\Onboard"? I'll assume you're referring to sound? If so then no worries. With sound make sure that you're using the mobo onboard sound chip for playback\recording & not the HDMI sound chip on the graphics card unless you really know what you're getting into.

The rest is OK as far as I can see but you could get by w\ a smaller, high quality PSU, say around 650W range to save some more money.

This is for reference info on current AMD graphics cards..........

If anyone is interested in considering an AMD Rx Polaris or Rx Vega vid card I'd highly recommend either getting the AIO liquid-cooled version or getting the reference model & slap a waterblock on it for a custom loop watercooling kit (what I'm gonna do) or wait for the AIB versions to come out w\ better cooling solutions IF you want the absolute best performance from it. From my experience w\ my AMD graphics cards, good air cooling\watercooling is a MUST to squeeze the most out of them as it is important to maintain the GPU's operating temp within 10*C of the GPU's TDP thermal throttling threshold w\o exceeding it to allow AMD's PowerTune to optimize the GPU power output\regulation to the GPU so it can perform to it's best. This is due to the way AMD has designed\coded their GPU's w\ PowerTune & only good air HSF's\watercooling can effectively maintain this temp threshold consistently enough to consistently achieve maximum Radeon GPU performance. The biggest mistake most users are making w\ AMD GPU's from a performance perspective since the advent of Hawaii IMHO is trying to "cool" them down & in some aspects trying to overclock them w\o fully understanding what I've typed here. AMD's PowerTune GPU control is HIGHLY dependent on this GPU temp delta to properly calculate the necessary power wattage for the GPU work load(s) at hand & if you over cool a Radeon GPU you WILL be cutting power to it excessively regardless of the GPU work load causing them to not perform to their best. AMD's Radeon WattMan GPU power control is already tuned to do this so I would recommend to leave the settings in default and just set the power to +50% to give WattMan full power to use if needed then adjust GPU\mem clocks. I have a copy of AMD' engineering white paper on PowerTune & how this works and have tested this out on a R9 290X on air and this Fury X on water and have found this to be true. This is IMHO the MAIN reason why Fury X can't overclock as well as it could.....you'd need to alter the BIOS to get more out of these cause there IS more to be had....AMD won't allow users to tap into it. I believe AMD's Rx Vega is gonna have the same issue. If you followed the Gamers Nexus review on the Vega FE air-cooled card after they put an aftermarket waterblock on it to show the performance difference between the 2 cooling methods this is already made apparent. This is the big issue w\ AMD's GCN GPU architecture IMHO.

Well this is my rambling 2 cents to attempt to help out. Hope all this can be of some value to you.

 :salute
« Last Edit: August 13, 2017, 04:22:57 AM by Pudgie »
Win 10 Home 64, AMD Ryzen 9 3900X, MSI MPG X570 Gaming Plus, GSkill FlareX 32Gb DDR4 3200 4x8Gb, XFX Radeon RX 6900X 16Gb, Samsung 950 Pro 512Gb NVMe PCI-E SSD (boot), Samsung 850 Pro 128Gb SATA SSD (pagefile), Creative SoundBlaster X7 DAC-AMP, Intel LAN, SeaSonic PRIME Gold 850W, all CLWC'd

Offline Adjuster

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Re: AMD Ryzen CPU
« Reply #163 on: August 13, 2017, 06:27:19 AM »
Pudgie

Fantastic response.

Great insight .  I've realized for a couple of reasons that using the TV is great for my Xbox One but what I'll be doing on PC will need a desktop and monitor,  pushing the budget once again  :D So new conundrum on that aspect now.

It's gonna be a gaming rig AH, World of Tanks, FPS shooters etc

So I'll use your valuable knowedge and tweek the shopping list accordingly , saving on CPU and power might allow for a decent monitor.

Will be sticking with Onboard sound,  long time since I added a Soundblaster card.

SSD for os only and everything else on HDD and I'll take Onboard your recommendation.

Will hunt around for the ram.

Once again thanks for taking the time to reply in such detail.

This community is awesome  :rock
Adjuster

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Offline Bizman

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Re: AMD Ryzen CPU
« Reply #164 on: August 13, 2017, 06:41:33 AM »
Adjuster, just so you know an SSD doesn't add any speed to your games. As you said, you're going to use it for OS only which is nice if you really need to save the extra minute at startup. Don't get me wrong, I'm not against new technology at all. I'm just saying that you can save an extra $50 at the cost of a pee pause at startup and use it for a monitor.

A word of caution: Don't skimp on the power supply! It's the most important component of them all. A poor PSU can fry your entire rig whereas a good quality one can even take some spikes from the power grid without any damage.
Quote from: BaldEagl, applies to myself, too
I've got an older system by today's standards that still runs the game well by my standards.

Kotisivuni