• Competitor rules

    Please remember that any mention of competitors, hinting at competitors or offering to provide details of competitors will result in an account suspension. The full rules can be found under the 'Terms and Rules' link in the bottom right corner of your screen. Just don't mention competitors in any way, shape or form and you'll be OK.

Ryzen 9 3900x to 5950x worth the upgrade today.

Soldato
Joined
19 Jun 2009
Posts
4,127
I have a Ryzen 9 3900X and considering upgrading to 5950X.

The computer is used for a lot of computation / VM's / software dev. The motherboard is an Gigabyte X570 AORUS MASTER, and I'm running 64GB of Micron 2666 ECC memory (4 x 16GB). I installed the ECC memory to be belts and braces on the calculations the computer does. There is a WD Black NVMe and WD Blue NVMe, plus 3 2TB Western Digital Gold HDD's, graphics card is just an Nvidia RTX T400 workstation card, Seasonic Prime 750 watt GOLD PSU. CPU cooler is an Artic i36 with dual push / pull fans, Silverstone FT02 case with triple 180mm fans.

Given how much PC parts are especially memory, was considering upgrading the CPU to extend the computer for another couple of years.

Also will I need a new Windows license, i'm already running Windows 11. From everything I've read the Windows key goes from the motherboard anyway.

Cheers
 
Last edited:
Also will I need a new Windows license, i'm already running Windows 11. From everything I've read the Windows key goes from the motherboard anyway.
No, new CPU should not trigger a reactivation. The exception is if you're running something tied to the TPM like Windows Hello/Bitlocker, since TPM resets can cause issues even with a simple BIOS update.

I assume the computation is heavily multithreaded? If so, then yeah, very much worth it.

Software work, it depends, often that's just a quick burst for the compiler and the rest of the time idle/near idle.
 
No, new CPU should not trigger a reactivation. The exception is if you're running something tied to the TPM like Windows Hello/Bitlocker, since TPM resets can cause issues even with a simple BIOS update.

I assume the computation is heavily multithreaded? If so, then yeah, very much worth it.

Software work, it depends, often that's just a quick burst for the compiler and the rest of the time idle/near idle.

Yes what I'm doing is very heavy multi-threaded.

Thanks for the heads up on TPM, but I don't have any special software or settings running that use TPM. You have just reminded me, in the past I upgraded the BIOS and think I went though a Microsoft login process to log in again, I guess that would have been a TPM reset.
 
You have just reminded me, in the past I upgraded the BIOS and think I went though a Microsoft login process to log in again, I guess that would have been a TPM reset.
Hmm, are you sure you're not using Windows Hello? If you have a pin, then you are.

Yes what I'm doing is very heavy multi-threaded.
4 extra cores and an uplift in single, it could cut some ~30% or more (in time) from something that is long-run multithreaded (like 5+ minutes duration).
 
Last edited:
Hmm, are you sure you're not using Windows Hello? If you have a pin, then you are.


4 extra cores and an uplift in single, it could cut some ~30% or more (in time) from something that is long-run multithreaded (like 5+ minutes duration).
Yes I am.using Windows hello I login with 4 pin numbers. What is the procedure to reset once TPM resets.

Its been a few years since I've built a PC, this PC started life as a Windows 10 machine.
 
Back
Top Bottom