this is quite possibly the funniest comment I've read this week
Good, I'm glad you understand flippancy.
No, I looked for a board that had all the features I wanted, I wasn't that bothered about OC as with an extra 50% on tap anyway I didn't see the "worth" of an extra £125 just for OCing an extra 1 or 2 hundred mhz
No you bought the UD3 and THEN discovered it wasn't good a bclk OCing. You could have bought an equally cheap board that was and we wouldn't even be having this discussion.
... I'm sorry but as you go up the scale of price on the X79 boards, they all make massive issue of the improvements to power delivery system in how many phases they have and the quality of the caps they use... I don't even know what you are for if you are saying that OC potential did not factor in to your buying decision for an X79 motherboard or a 3820
The Sabertooth is built for durability not OCing so how can you claim I bought it because it's a good OCer? If that's all I was interested in I would have bought one of their ROG boards which are better known for OCing.
this comment is quite funny from a guy who started a thread entirely on the basis of apparently "asking" a question of wether a 3930k was "worth £200" more than a 3820 and then immediately jumped on people who said "yes" to tell them they are wrong.
Please show me where someone has posted a polite reply to my OP, justifying why they bought the 3930K and I've jumped on them.......don't worry, I'll wait..........
...no? Oh well. The only people I've 'jumped on' are those that have chosen to attack me in their post in this thread (I believe you are one of them).
I have argued against people who come straight out telling me how much better their CPU is and used unrealistic performance increases like you have your 50% thing.
The only funny thing here is reading some people's first posts here, 3930K owners insulted that I even ask the question. Many cases of 'he doth protest too much' in this thread from some people.
I'm not saying you wasted money on an expensive motherboard as obviously the extra OC potential was of value to you
Again, I did not buy it for OCing potential and cheaper boards outside the UD3 can OC just as well as my Sabertooth.
I realize you want to believe the choice is either cheap mobo + 3930K OR expensive mobo +3820 (because you've bought the UD3) for OCing but that's imply not the case.
Your logic is based on a false premise.
I'm just pointing out that based on your OP of saying that 3930k is not worth £200 more than a 3820
..to 99% of people building an X79 system. You missed that bit which is kinda important.
Please stop trying to claim that I've said the 3930k is bad value under all circumstances.
You are the king off strawmen
, that actually the price differential between a 4.5ghz 3930k system and a 4.6ghz 3820 system is actually pretty negligible and therefore a 3930k CAN BE "worth" the difference in price, even with some of your most outrageous provisos on the conditions that you consider "fair" for a comparison
The difference is £200, that may be negligible to you but not everyone.
You are telling people they are wrong.
People have said that yes to them, the 3930k is "worth" it and you have repeatedly said or suggested that it isn't
No I haven't, at least not personally.
your point was that you could change a CPU vastly quicker than a motherboard, as if changing a motherboard was a massively arduous task
Sorry but if that's how you inferred it that is your problem. All I said is that's it's easier to change CPU than it is a mobo, which is true.
Walking up one stair is easier than walking up two, that doesn't imply walking up two is 'massively arduous task'.
But for me it would certainly be more than a 30 min job. If I was changing my mobo I would...
Prep - 10m
Remove all components - 15m
Install new mobo - 10m (I guess you use a drill or something to whack those screws in 2 mins but I prefer the tradional way and hand screw them)
Re connect all components - 10m
Wire management - ???? (I can spend hours on this tbh)
Set up new BIOS - 10m
manual reading time during build (30 mins)
So it would take me a couple of hours from going from working PC to working PC to install a new board. It would take me 20m to install a new CPU.
, but in my most recent case and build everything is pretty modular and easy to work on, so disconnecting a couple of sata cables and taking a graphics card out is easy and not much more work than what would be involved in changing a CPU
Yes it would, but we'll just have to agree to disagree.
you were insinuating that I made a poor choice in going with a cheaper motherboard because you were nigh on certain that I will have to replace it (for what reason I would need to replace it I'm not quite sure as you haven't stated a feature that yours has that mine doesn't, other than "military grade" caps rofl)
I said "I could equally say" and made the claim about the mobo mimicking the justifications you've been making for spending more on the CPU. I never said your mobo would 'certainly' not last that long. I was [sarcastically] offering an argument that was a silly as the ones you've been making but that seems to have completely flown over your head and you've taken it as a serious point.
But anyway, doesn't my board "feature" bsclk OCing over yours, you keep telling it does so I guess it must be true.
But why are limiting a mobo's value on 'features' only? A Ford Fiesta has more "features" as a Ferrari but that doesn't mean it's just as good build wise, performance wise, efficiency wise.
You're talking as if the only thing that separates a good mobo from a bad one is how many "USB 3.0 Integrated!" type stickers it comes with.
as I've already said, the reason I went for a 3930k is because *I* *think* it will outlast a 3820, so lets come back to this thread in 3-4 years time and see who still has their CPU (and motherboard for that matter) and how they compare in games then

Exactly my point, you believe your 3930k will outlast my 3820 but think your cheap mobo will have the same longevity as my more expensive one. Can you not see the hypocrisy there and why I made that flippant remark earlier.
Unless you mean 'outlast' in terms of still being a capable CPU in the future. Well both are chips are OTT for 99% of uses today so the fact your 3930K may still run a viable system in 10 years is fine so long as your not planning to upgrade for that long.
As I said, unless you are a heavy renderer/film maker (and some here seemingly are) you need those 6 cores now, no one else really does and I can't see 6 cores showing real extra performance in everyday applications/games for a few years yet (at which point I'll upgrade).