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w0D1n

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Profile Information

  • Gender
    Male
  • Location
    The Netherlands

System

  • CPU
    AMD Threadripper 3960X
  • Motherboard
    ASUS Zenith II Extreme
  • RAM
    G.Skill Trident Z Neo 3600 C16 64GB
  • GPU
    Nvidia 2080 Super
  • Case
    BeQuiet! Dark Base 900 Pro rev.2
  • Storage
    Samsung 970 EVO Plus 1TB M.2 NVME SSD + Samsung 960 Pro 512GB M.2 NVME SSD
  • PSU
    BeQuiet! Dark Power Pro 11 1200W Platinum
  • Display(s)
    ASUS ROG PG278QR 144/165Hz
  • Cooling
    Kraken X72
  • Keyboard
    Logitech G910
  • Mouse
    Logitech G502
  • Sound
    Onboard
  • Operating System
    Windows 10

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  1. Thank you for the answers, As you can see i use pcie 3.0 nvme ssd's. 18 seconds is not bad i agree. I was just wondering why it fluctuated and that has been answered. Thanks
  2. Hi, I get boot times of 17 to 18 seconds and sometimes about 11 seconds.. That with same hardware without any bios/os changes. Hardware: - Asus Zenith II extreme alpha (CMS is off, Fast boot is enabled, Wait time is set to 0) - AMD Threadripper 3960X - 4x 16GB G.Skill Trident Z Neo 3600Mhz C16 (FCLK Freq: 1800) - Nvidia 2080 Super - 2x Samsung 970 Evo Plus 1TB Nothing is attached to usb ports exept for a keyboard, mouse and webcam Can anyone explain why there is so much difference in boot times?
  3. I posted a picture above although it might not be that clear i'm afraid. This build is from February this year, so everything is as good as new
  4. Yes, when i look straight at the connector where the pin needs to go i see the capacitor is dented.
  5. Hi, I have a Corsair AX1200i power supply. When i tried to connect the right part of the 24 pin connector on the PSU for the motherboard it seemed that there was a condensator blocking the way for the clip that holds the connector in place. I did not used that much force when it struggled to get the connector in there but now i can see i dint the condensator with the pin of that connector (who the **** would think there would be a condensator in the way right..) It happened when i was building my new system and now sometimes my pc just shuts off and sometimes it wont start (short start with an almost insta shutdown). Could it be that the condensator is to much damaged let alone couse for these problems? It is not the temps or windows etc.. i had the pc shut down while i was in the bios lol.
  6. After a while now i figured out that these G.Skill modules need a tad more voltage.. when i set them to 1.38 instead of 1.35 the pc does not double boot anymore. Dont know if it's the modules or the motherboard's fault. But this helped for sure.
  7. The issue was the PSU Corsair AX1200i Seems a lot of people experiencing the same issue with this one.. Something is just simply wrong with these PSU's... Here is the link to the post on corsair forums: https://forum.corsair.com/v3/showthread.php?p=1014255
  8. hmm ok i will try that, thank you all for responding.
  9. I have the same issue with that software. I still keep closing it in tray after boot. It even couses lower benchmark performance on cinabench 20 lol.. realy weit while it's using so much CPU. Badly programmed i guess? And yes.. i hope in the future these manufacturers will include some kind of memory in the devices that keeps the settings you want without software needs to set it after every boot. This also counts for NZXT Cam software! What a load of %$!*
  10. Hi, I was checking HWMonitor due to some problems with my PC, and now suddently i noticed that it reports 20v on the 12v value.. Is this readout wrong or is there something worng with the Motherboard?
  11. Kraken x72. But CPU temps are ok i ment the Chipset temp with 78c. I have screenshots but somehow it wont let me post the pictures. VRM temps are good to (arround 45c) and they have dedicated fans that go on when they reach 60c
  12. Hi, After like 3 months that i build my new system it shuts down randomly. Not only when playing games or when my pc has to work but also on idle moments and even when just in bios. Normally i would think it would be the PSU or temperatures, but i checked all of these. And if it would be the PSU then i would think it's a constant factor. But my PC can play games like all evening without a problem and then there are days that the PC Shuts down a couple of times in a row. Sometimes with 2 minutes interval and sometimes like 10 minutes, and there are times it takes hours.. idle or in use. But u can see i can't trust this system like this. I provided some screenshots with temperatures in idle. The only thing that jumps out for me is the Chipset temp witch is like 78 Celsius idle. I already tried to apply new thermal paste on cpu (artic silver 5) and used the Linus video for reference. It cant be dust because all is new hardware. Anyone had this to or knows what the couses this? PC Specs: Threadripper 3960X Asus Zenith 2 extreme (TRX40 chipset) Geforce RTX 2080 Super 64GB G.Skill mem (3600Mhz c16) Samsung 970 evo plus 1TB nvme ssd (attached to motherboard M1.1) Samsung 960 pro 512GB nvme ssd (attached to motherboard M1.2) EDIT: Seems i can't add pictures
  13. Marius, thank you for your reply. I somewhat figured that indeed. Still wondering why they turn Numa nodes off by default since it hurts overall performance it seems. And with this impact i would think more people would have figured this out and talked about it. But can't seem to find out exactly. This video helped me explain it a little:
  14. Hi, I am wondering about NUMA Nodes and their influence with gaming. I build a pc with a AMD Threadripper 3660X and ASUS Zenith II Extreme and i used the all on Auto settings exept for memory witch is 3600Mhz in combination with 1800 infinity fabric speed (1:1). In auto mode the system wont use NUMA nodes and i thought that is good since i read somewhere that it would hurt gaming performance. But after testing things for optimal settings i found out some differences as mentioned below: (This is testes with AIDA64 Extreme and Cinabench 20. And a recent FPS Shooter on a 2080 Super. Motherboard BIOS version: 0807) Without NUMA Nodes (this was even worse on earlier bios versions) Memory latency = ~80ns Memory copying speed = ~100 GB/s Call of Duty Modern Warfare FPS = ~80-100 FPS Cinabench 20 Score: ~13200 With NUMA nodes set to 2 nodes per socket Memory latency = ~74ns Memory copying speed = ~110 GB/s Call of Duty Modern Warfare FPS = ~100-120 FPS Cinabench 20 Score: ~13500 So i have set it to 2 nodes per socket obviously. I understand a little how NUMA nodes work and a extra layer should indeed not do anything good for speed.. But can someone explain to me what the NUMA nodes do in this case and why it actually increases speed/performance?
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