coercitiv
Diamond Member
- Jan 24, 2014
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I would like to know both temps & performance when a hard 140W TDP limit is in place.I would like to know temperatures when the CPU is limited to 140W its rated TDP.
I would like to know both temps & performance when a hard 140W TDP limit is in place.I would like to know temperatures when the CPU is limited to 140W its rated TDP.
So Ryzen is a multipurpose CPU, that wins in many productivity benchmarks, looses in games by a small margin and uses 66% of the power. Oh, and costs less too.
You can spin it any way you want.
Awesome, these big words, yet your kind of user is the one that if they purchased a delidded&OC'd product, they would immediately torture it the cruelest way possible to see if everything checks out, am I right? Where does he make the mistake exactly?Awesome. He was able to get a VRMs to overheat in an incredibly unrealistic usage scenario. Guess what? I can blow up the greatest of car engines if you remove the rev limiter.
Not at all. Heavily optimized compute tasks can sometimes get even more out of the chip's ALUs.Awesome. He was able to get a VRMs to overheat in an incredibly unrealistic usage scenario. Guess what? I can blow up the greatest of car engines if you remove the rev limiter.
It looks like this guy was essentially happily priming at 4.5ghz without even bothering with the AVX offset.OC3D together with Der8auer:
PS: OFF TOPIC: I've always been skeptical of Ryzen's treatment of Prime 95 (because of the power consumption figures, and The Stilt even mentioned it in the 'Ryzen Technical' thread ), and hearing him say this got me wondering whether AMD may have programmed Ryzen to run Prime 95 with a negative offset. I believe running the benchmark portion of Prime 95 should shed some better light on this matter.
hearing him say this got me wondering whether AMD may have programmed Ryzen to run Prime 95 with a negative offset. I believe running the benchmark portion of Prime 95 should shed some better light on this matter.
OC3D together with Der8auer:
It looks like this guy was essentially happily priming at 4.5ghz without even bothering with the AVX offset.
It's interesting how you misinterpreted my comments and put them in a nice quote. This is quite fraudulent, hehe.Conspiracy theories? LOL
"AMD programmed Ryzen to secretly run at lower temperatures to make intel look bad when they launched skylake-X" is probably the funniest thing I've read on these tech forums.
Skylake X is pretty much a disaster at this point, no conspiracy theories required to see why Ryzen is beating it in so many perf/w tests. Heck Intel can't even beat BW-E in perf/w... maybe even worse than Haswell. What's next, a 220W chip?
29.2 (June 10th, 2017)
29.1 (March 27th, 2017)
- Throughput benchmarks of all FFT implementations are written to gwnum.txt.
- These benchmarks will then be used to pick the best FFT implementation to use.
- This can lead to minor performance improvements.
- Benchmarks are run daily for any FFT sizes that will be needed within the next 7 days.
- Once enough benchmark data is accumulated, automatic benchmarks no longer take place.
- Default FFT implementations for Ryzen added.
- A few new FFT sizes (up to 50M) are enabled for FMA3-capable CPUs.
- Faster trial factoring for machines that support FMA (Haswell and later). Multi-threaded trial factoring now supports more than one thread sieving for small primes. Several tuning parameters added - see undoc.txt.
- The portable library, hwloc, for analyzing a machine's topology is now used. This replaces the buggy code prime95 used to detect hyperthreading. It also eliminates the need for AffinityScramble2. Running a benchmark will output this topology information to results.txt.
- AVX-512 trial factoring support added.
- Dialog box for benchmarking added.
- In the Test/Worker Windows dialog box you no longer choose how many threads each worker uses. Instead, you choose how many CPU cores each worker uses. There affinity options have been removed. There are two new options that will decide if each worker also uses hyperthreading.
What speed is it actually running AVX at?OK, I shut it down and put the kill-a-watt in. Idle, 65 watts, full load 170 watts. Temps went from 40c to 55c
Edit: This is the complete system, from the wall, and yes thats all 8 cores and 16 threads.
Oh, this is running blend. Do you want something else ? Task manager says its running 100% CPU
No idea, just running 29.2 Prime95What speed is it actually running AVX at?
It's interesting how you misinterpreted my comments and put them in a nice quote. This is quite fraudulent, hehe.
P95 has always been, by far, the holy grail of cpu stress-testing since as far back as I can remember, and continues to be. So, of course, I was surprised to see Ryzen pulling significantly less watts than it should, running the software; and I don't think it is limited to the avx version alone either. As has been pointed out, though, if Ryzen is only running avx code at half-speed, then how can anyone reasonably expect to see anything other than the numbers we're seeing from SKL-X? P95 torture test is a power virus running the thirstiest code in P95 (avx version) at insane overclocks.
You know what? I'll concede if you can show me a Ryzen chip on the same cooling as the 7820x in Tahoe's sig, clocked anywhere above 4.3ghz running P95 without throttling. Now, that's mission impossible right there!
I can show you one that will outrun anything AMD makes, even when overclocked, while drawing 165w.You know what? If you can find a 7820x that runs Prime95 at stable 4.3Ghz without drawing way over the rated power for Skylake-X motherboards (165W) I'd be happy to to concede that Skylake might just be a "huge mistake" and not an absolute unmitigated disaster. Too bad there isn't much chance of that
No offense but that is all crap. The difference between Ryzen, a 7700, and let's say a 7900x on AVX is that AMD A.) Doesn't use 512 like the 7900 does. B.) Uses 2 128bit piplines for handling 1 AVX 2 instructions.They don't need that because Ryzen doesn't run AVX1/AVX2 full speed. So they don't have these heat issues there but they also suffer from a poor performance if AVX2 is properly used, recent x265 binaries for example.
You mean the 165w (minimum) power specification? Pffft! It's like crying over the fact that your 200mph stock corvette is actually capable of speeds of 300mph but uses more fuel to do it! What kinda logic is that? HEDT boards are built way beyond spec to accommodate extreme overclocking. They can deliver the necessary power if the chip needs it, which is what you get when you run a torture test like P95.You know what? If you can find a 7820x that runs Prime95 at stable 4.3Ghz without drawing way over the rated power for Skylake-X motherboards (165W) I'd be happy to to concede that Skylake might just be a "huge mistake" and not an absolute unmitigated disaster. Too bad there isn't much chance of that