What about something like the Asustor Drivestor 2 Lite
This looks like a great little solution, not too expensive, though that can depend on the drives I get for it. I'm assuming proper NAS drives is probably a good call.
What about something like the Asustor Drivestor 2 Lite
This looks like a great little solution, not too expensive, though that can depend on the drives I get for it. I'm assuming proper NAS drives is probably a good call.
Yeah if you don't mind, always willing to entertain other options!
Kind of depends how you're going to set up your nas. If you're going to use raid levels then yes. If it's just a bunch of disks then not so much. One of the differences between normal and nas disks is that dekstop drives will try longer to read a damaged or otherwise unreadable section as that is the only copy of the data. Nas drives should mark the section as unreadable sooner because the data should be either mirrored somewhere else or can be calculated from a checksum.
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If the primary purpose of the PC is gaming, you'd just get the 9800X3D and you're good. The 9800X3D is only an 8 core CPU (same as the 1700X), but the uplift in single and multithreaded performance is still very strong, so it would still be a great upgrade for both types of usage.So I'm considering different models of the 9000x series. My first choice was 9950x, but I'm also curious about the 9900x, the 9800x3d or even the 9700x.
I've watched a bunch of reviews comparing them but its hard to know just how much difference is between them when I'm coming from an 8 year old 1700x. This is why I dread getting new pc parts because it screws with my adhd and I can't make a choice![]()
If the primary purpose of the PC is gaming, you'd just get the 9800X3D and you're good. The 9800X3D is only an 8 core CPU (same as the 1700X), but the uplift in single and multithreaded performance is still very strong, so it would still be a great upgrade for both types of usage.
The 9700X is a good all-round CPU, gaming, single and multithreaded, particularly if your productivity usage is heavy on single threaded, because the 9700X is very strong there. If you're building a higher-end PC for gaming, you'd normally just go 9800X3D and a cheaper PC something like the 7600X, so the 9700X is really what I'd call a mixed usage CPU, rather than just for gaming.
The 9900X is a good productivity CPU, since you get 12 speedy cores for multithreaded work, but for gaming the 12 core CPUs are not optimal (due to the 6x6 configuration) and not a CPU I'd recommend for gaming when the 9800X3D is not much more.
The 9950X is a very strong CPU for productivity, as you'd expect (16 cores), but you'd sacrifice the extra performance that X3D CPUs get in gaming.
The 9950X3D is like the ultimate CPU for mixed usage, since it has strong productivity AND great gaming performance. Though obviously that comes with a high price.
For me, you're looking at something like (for the choice to make sense):
30% gaming, 70% productivity: 9950X (or mainly multi threaded workloads)
50% gaming, 50% productivity: 9900X
70% gaming, 30% productivity: 9700X (or mainly single threaded workloads)
90% gaming, 10% productivity: 9800X3D
Money no object / supreme at both: 9950X3D.
Mainly I'm aware of it just because the 12 core CPUs benchmark slightly slower in games than the 8/16 core CPUs.Could you expand more on the 6x6 configuration you mentioned, I've not heard of that before so I don't know what that entails.
Mainly I'm aware of it just because the 12 core CPUs benchmark slightly slower in games than the 8/16 core CPUs.
The 12 core AMD CPUs effectively have 2 CPUs in 1, since they're 6 cores and 6 cores.
That's not an issue for most workloads, but because gaming is latency sensitive, you don't want cross-communication between the two. AMD can address this by using core-parking, which ensures that gaming threads are loaded on only one of the CPUs (i.e. 6 of the cores), otherwise there's a small performance penalty, depending on which cores the threads land.
I'm not sure if core parking is enabled by default on non-X3D CPUs or not, but X3D CPUs have a bigger issue with it because only half the 9900X3D/9950X3D gets the 3D cache.
if you're looking at any gaming then getting an x3d chip is a must, especially with your budget
and with your budget you can get a 9950x3d + 5070ti, i'm not sure what more there is to ruminate about
I don't own a 12 core CPU, so I couldn't tell you from user experience, but in benchmarks they're usually just a little bit behind (e.g. 1-2%), though in a few games the difference is larger (3-5%).As someone who isn't a enthusiast, am I likely to notice slightly lower performance because of it? If it is just slightly lower framerates then that's fine, but if it causes stuttering or other things like that then that would be an issue, I need stability in both gaming and production over the absolute best performance.
The 9700X/9800X3D are roughly twice as fast in single and multi thread as your previous CPU, so you should notice a good uplift in anything that isn't storage bottlenecked. If you have the budget for it, I'd get at least the 9800X3D for the higher gaming performance.Thanks for explaining that. How much is that actually going to be an issue for someone coming from such an old system at this point?
My general rule of thumb is that 150 watts is the point that air coolers are not a big fan (pun unintended). Sooo, if you do long-run workloads with the CPU pegged @ 100% a lot, fan noise is likely to be an issue. If you have a lot of tasks that are short bursts, it could also cause the fan to ramp up/ramp down a lot, unless they're mainly single threaded.The OC guys commented on this too, but until they test it we don't know
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also worth noting that with the 7700x and the 7800x3d, the x3d L3 caches was stacked on top of the cores. As it was more sensitive to heat, the cores were downclocked to protect the l3 cache layer, with the result that for productivity the 7700x beat the 7800x3d by a decent amount
With the 9000 series though, the x3d cpu's had the l3 cache layer placed below the core layer, with a insulating layer between them. This meant the core layer didn't need to be downclocked, so the 9800x3d actually outperforms the 9700x in productivity (as the L3 cache can be useful for that too)...so if you have the money and you're looking at those two, just get the 9800x3d. It's the reason I upgraded to the 9800x3d from the 7800x3d, the work side of things (helped I had a son to give my 7800x3d to though)
Interesting, that is definitely getting deeper into these things than I understand properly so I'll have to take your word for itDo you have a trusted source you like that shows this is action?
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I dunno, what's reasonable?Is it completely unreasonable to be disappointed in those chips only being twice as fast as one that is 8 years old? lol
It is hard to say for sure, since we don't know the CPU, but if you're going with a 9800X3D then the peerless assassin (or similar cooler) is fine. You might need to adjust the fan curve a little when you first get it, but should be fine after that. In the circumstances, you might prefer to set a higher RPM and then leave it, rather than have the fan ramping up/down on demand.I want to micro manage zero amount, I do not like micro managing, I like set and forgetting. Personally not bothered about fan noise since I'm partially deaf and wear headphones anyway, so more concerned about any performance issues and throttling etc.
The main issue I have now where I'm seeing a lot of slow down is went working in clip studio paint and I either have a ton of layers or working on a larger canvas, normally both. It freezes a lot just moving the view around or zooming in and out and that's just terrible for workflow.
The easiest way to check is to run something like task manager or hwinfo (sensor tab) in a window or minimised alongside your program and when you have the slow downs look at exactly what's happening (i.e. what part of your rig is at 100%).Saving larger files is also a minutes long affair sometimes, and as someone who compulsively saves that quickly turns into a nightmare.
I'm hoping a better cpu and a huge amount of ram (currently only have 16gb) will fix these issues. I've been told that CSP is mainly a single core (or thread, I'm not sure) program.
I dunno, what's reasonable?![]()
No, not generally. It would only be faster when the app was heavily multithreaded. It would be easier to cool in those circumstances though, yes.Oh here's a question: Would the 9950x3d running in eco mode be faster than the 9800x generally? (and also have an easier time being air cooled).
Haha, yeah, those days are long gone I'm afraid. Doubling the single/multi core even though it has the same number of cores is actually pretty impressive.8 times faster, one for each year?I dunno, was hoping for something higher than 2x though but that's just my unreasonable expectation I guess lol
If your usage is pretty static (i.e. you do the same stuff over and over) then that's easy enough to do, yep! The only reason to adjust it would be a new more demanding app, or a summer heatwave.I'm ok with setting up a fan curve and then just leaving it after that is figured out, I just don't want to have to constantly mess with things over a longer period of time.
Single core can do A LOT to brute force it, but ultimately, yes, sometimes the app just bogs down in heavy use and there's not much that can be done.Thanks for the tip, I'll have to do that and keep an eye on what is happening, based on what CSP uses I reckon it is most likely the cpu and possibly ram bottle neck, so fingers crossed those get solved with a better cpu and much higher ram. Would be so lame if it was just bad code![]()
No, not generally. It would only be faster when the app was heavily multithreaded. It would be easier to cool in those circumstances though, yes.
Hopefully you can let us know what task manager shows and we'll have a clearer idea what you're best off throwing money at.