Quite a bit of price jump tho.That is kind of the advantage of 12~16 cores it gives you options if you are heavy user. This is why I wouldn't upgrade to a Ryzen 7 5800X from a Ryzen 7 3700X in this case,as its more of the same!!
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Quite a bit of price jump tho.That is kind of the advantage of 12~16 cores it gives you options if you are heavy user. This is why I wouldn't upgrade to a Ryzen 7 5800X from a Ryzen 7 3700X in this case,as its more of the same!!
There's a single thread topic here, (where humbug wrongly bragged his Ryzen 3600 was faster than my 9700k in DXO - it was 35% slower) in it you will see the comparisons I did using DXO.
If you are doing single photos at a time then DXO will only use a max of 8 threads. This is why my 8/8 clocked 9700k is faster in DXO then my very well tuned 12/24 3900X.
For the 3900X to be faster I need to batch export at least 2 photos.
I use NikTools and Photoshop but these generally don't take advantage of multi-core and rely more on single thread speed.
I will be testing out both the 5800x and 5900x to see which one is better overall in our scenarios but I would probably opt for the 5900x if making a pre-review decision.
Quite a bit of price jump tho.
Hi everyone
I've decided to give my rig a mid-life upgrade and switch my 3700x for either a 5800x or 5900x. My 3700x is 1st gen silicon and a bit of a dog - it took an undervolt and a lot of PBO tuning just to hit 4.3GHz single core and it won't post if I go over 3200 on the ram.
My main uses are photo editing (42mp raws in DXO PL, and tiffs in Photoshop and Alien Skin/Nik collection) and gaming (targeting 4K 60fps).
Question is am I better off with 8 cores and a single ccx for better latency or upgrading to 12 cores? I know the next gen consoles are 8 core, but they are also more resource light so I'm wondering if having 4 cores free for Windows to faff around with in the background is preferable.
Any thoughts?
I don’t think going from 3700x to 5900x is going to bring as much value for the OP as going to 3900x for instance based on current pricing.For Zen3 as a whole,yes I agree especially compared to Zen2 street prices. However,within the Zen3 stack,the Ryzen 7 5800X is £160 more than the Ryzen 7 3700X. Until AMD tells us if there is a cheaper Ryzen 7 5700X and when we can get it,its the cheapest 8C Zen3 CPU we can find now.So the Ryzen 9 5900X is £100 more for 50% more cores,and looks "better" value.
I suspect you will be better off with the 12c, plus PS and Nik will benefit more from the higher Mhz. We are yet to see if the CCX advantage of the 5800x out weighs the Mhz advantage of the 5900X in any scenarios.I do tend to batch process, so I'm leaning more towards 12c. I know it's only 100MHz, but the higher boosts won't hurt either.
I don’t think going from 3700x to 5900x is going to bring as much value for the OP as going to 3900x for instance based on current pricing.
the the argument why upgrade to the same gen CPU blah blah blah.
so best to wait for 6 months at least till rocket lake drops. You would imagine that is when cpu prices will take a bit of a drop then
Sorry but this is an error. DXO does not have a setting where you can select how many cores it will utillise. It only has a setting for how many images are processed in parallel. To max out a 12c/24t CPU you will need to set it to 3 images, though once you go above the recommended 2 images you can run into errors.I know DXO hammers the cores pretty hard, it will eat as many cores as you want to throw at it (there is a setting in there you can select how many cores to be utilised)l
You are right. That is the setting. How many parallel work processes it can do.Sorry but this is an error. DXO does not have a setting where you can select how many cores it will utillise. It only has a setting for how many images are processed in parallel. To max out a 12c/24t CPU you will need to set it to 3 images, though once you go above the recommended 2 images you can run into errors.
That’s a fair point. I think AMD will most likely keeping their 12c and 16c as high as possible as there is no competition.Waiting for Rocketlake S might be wise,but since its only 8 high power cores(and 8 lower power cores),I suspect it will have more of an effect on the Ryzen 5 and Ryzen 7 prices.
Also the problem with the Ryzen 5 and Ryzen 7 CPUs is the offset single chiplet. It means heat distribution over the IHS is uneven and certain coolers don't appear to play as well with this,ie,they don't make proper contact over the single chiplet.
So some of these issues you have with the Ryzen 7 might be down to the cooler design too.
The Ryzen 9 CPUs,due to dual chiplets have a much more even thermal distribution over the IHS in theory.
I don't follow this logic. If your cooling solution has a perfectly flat surface (as it should) and the thermal paste does its job of smoothing any minor imperfections, it shouldn't make a lot of difference as the ihs and cooler base should help spread the heat.
I maybe can see some with direct heat pipe to ihs contact not doing quite so well on that front, but regardless cooling more cores is always going to put more heat into any cooler to deal with.
With an AIO or custom w/c loop, I would imagine any imbalance of cpu heat location would be largely negated?
As others have mentioned it doesn't make much point switching from a 3700X to another 8 core unless you really are aiming for max frames at say 1080p (maybe 1440p). Personally I would snap up a 5900X and sell the 3700X whilst it still holds a good value. hopefully you wont have to spend much over £300 for a tasty 12 core chip. The ability to have 4 spare cores whilst gaming would be very beneficial for various other software in the background may not be your use case now but who knows how it will evolve over the next 2 - 3years. Certainly where I will be heading anyway.
As others have mentioned it doesn't make much point switching from a 3700X to another 8 core unless you really are aiming for max frames at say 1080p (maybe 1440p). Personally I would snap up a 5900X and sell the 3700X whilst it still holds a good value. hopefully you wont have to spend much over £300 for a tasty 12 core chip. The ability to have 4 spare cores whilst gaming would be very beneficial for various other software in the background may not be your use case now but who knows how it will evolve over the next 2 - 3years. Certainly where I will be heading anyway.
Thanks! Given that gaming is going to be 8 cores for the foreseeable and 4k gaming will be cpu bottlenecked anyway, I'm likely to get better mileage out of a 5900x for my photo editing workflow.
I did think about holding off for ddr5 and pcie 5.0, but I can't see either tech being groundbreaking in the 1st iteration.
Thats exactly my feeling, I will be getting a 5900X to replace my 3700X and then move on when DDR5 matures. either way a good time to be into PC's given the stagnation over the last 10 years
I'd go 5900X you'll be keeping the CPU for 5 years in all likelihood and 12 cores are bound to get used more in future. For the price difference I don't see the point in compromising especially as productivity tasks
will be so much faster on 12 cores.