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I recently upgraded my GPU to a 5700 XT and am thinking of upgrading my monitor. Currently I mainly play Astroneer, Subnautica Below Zero, Cold Waters, World of Warships, and a few others. My main question is should I bump up to 1440P or stick with high refresh 1080p? I have an older 1080 now and would like to keep it for a second monitor. Thanks for the help!
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So I finally bit the bullet and upgraded my 1700x to a 3700x. I was even able to re-use my motherboard after ASRock issued a bios update for my X370 Gaming X. The install process was smooth, and other then an oddly long boot time (more then a minute) everything seemed fine. I was in the middle of running a few benchmarks when I had my first bluescreen (WHEA UNCORRECTABLE ERROR). I rebooted and checked out Event Viewer and saw more than a dozen WHEA-Logger Event 17 warnings. They were corrected hardware errors concerning the PCI Express Root Port. 40 minutes later my system bluescreened again. I'm now running a fresh windows install on a spare SSD and every reboot Event Viewer is showing multiple WHEA-Logger warnings. All my drivers are up to date (including the newest AMD chipset driver) and while my system seems stable now (I've run an hour each of MEMtest, AIDA64, and FurMark) I'm not sure I trust it to stay that way. Has anyone else had luck using Ryzen 2 in a X370 motherboard? Is it possible these errors indicate a damaged CPU or Motherboard? Could a new Bios revision fix these issues? When I have time I'll try swapping my old 1700x back into the board to see if the WHEA errors stop, but if anyone has a better solution I'd love to hear it. System: Ryzen 3700x ASRock X370 Gaming X Ballistix 32GB (2x16GB) DDR4 3200 Gigabyte GeForce 1070 Let me know if you need any other info. Thanks!
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- ryzen 2
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Source 1: https://www.guru3d.com/news-story/sixteen-core-ryzen-9-3000-series-socket-am4-es-sample-at-4-2-ghz-spotted.html Source 2: https://www.techpowerup.com/255386/amd-ryzen-9-3000-is-a-16-core-socket-am4-beast Source 3: https://www.techpowerup.com/255405/amd-ryzen-3000-zen-2-a-memory-oc-beast-ddr4-5000-possible So a few things, while the clockspeeds appear to be lower than expected according to previous rumors. Please note that ES chips generally are clocked lower, so this doesn't rule out higher clockspeeds as of yet. Although, current speeds aren't too terrible for the amount of cores being offered. At least a 200-300MHz clockspeed boost could be plausible in final samples. As for the memory; this is great and with higher speed kits of ram, combined with the IF - will show some serious gains. Especially considering that we currently are seeing Ryzen top out at around 3000MHz. I cannot even imagine what performance gains with a 5000MHz kit would look like! SiSoftware Benches:
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I was going through my bios and I tried and see how much the auto overclock in my Asus ROG Strix X470-F Gaming would OC my CPU, and it said I could get a 3% gain in performance. But is that enough to try it and go for it on the stock Wraith cooler?
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Right now I got a rx 570 4gb with an old i3. So I have several question regarding zen processors. First, I was wondering how much would a better mobo affect my ram oc if I plan to get something like 3000mhz cl 16/ 3000mhz cl 15 (hynix chips) and overclock/ fine-tune it. The boards I have in mind are b450 mortar from msi, ab350m pro4 and b450 hdv(this one also has only 2 ram slots) from asrock. Second, still regarding ram overclocking/ tuning, how much better would a second gen ryzen oc the same ram modules as listed above(3000 cl 16/3000 cl 15) compared to a first gen ryzen(asking because ryzen 3 1200 is 25$ cheaper here than the 2200g). Third question: how much better does second gen ryzen oc compared to the first one? So what frequency would a 1200 run compared to the 2200g when both would be oc'd at the same voltage, and lets assume they are similar quality in terms of silicon. Last but not least, would it be worth it to get the 2600 if I plan to upgrade my gpu in 4 years? I just cant figure how cpus will age now since amd entered the battle again. I know zen 2 is around the corner and that's why I'm trying to clear all my questions regarding first and second gen ryzen, so I can make a simple, clear decision when third gen ryzen is launched.
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Just noticed this on PCWorld's video that the chip carrier on Ryzen 3000 does indeed have a spot for another die. Here's hoping for a 16-core CPU.
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Hey guys. New to the forums but this seems to be the best place for help when building a new PC. I'm working on my new build for gaming and I'm afraid my PSU isn't going to be able to handle the new components. I have an Antec 500W Semi-Modular, but I am thinking of upgrading to the Corsair RMx 850W, just to be safe. Component list is below, any help appreciated. MSI Armor OC 8GB RX580 Ryzen 2600 MSI B450 Gaming Plus Corsair Vengeance 8GB DDR4 3000
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Hey guys Coming from an i5 3570K. I currently have it at 4.4 GHz and it does well in video editing. 1080p and 4K I'm planning on upgrading. I'm thinking for Ryzen but that means I'll change my system completely. Go for Ryzen or upgrade to a 3770K? Is their difference that much? Going for the 3770K means I'll spend less. Going for the Ryzen means I spend more, but does the price justify the performance I'm going to get? Complete PC Specs i5 3570K @ 4.4GHz Palit GTX 960 2GB 8GB Crucial Ballistix Sport Samsung 840 EVO 240GB Seagate Barracuda 500GB Seasonic M12ii 520 EVO
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Hi everyone, I’m planning on a Gaming Vm with nas server on one machine, but I’m thinking if I should buy a second hand x79 system with an i73930k or go for a ryzen 5 2600 system brand new. The price on both side would be similar due to items like ram being overpriced on the Ryzen side. I want to know on performance side of thing and general opinion on what I should choose.. thanks guys
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Does anyone know for certain what the safe voltage is for the Ryzen 2's IMC? I'm working on trying to find stable tight timings for a new kit of memory and it is taking at least 1.45v. I am not worried about the voltages affecting the RAM itself, but more what a high DRAM voltage means in terms of the VTT. So with VTT being half the voltage of the DRAM value -- I want to know where I should stop with the DRAM voltage. The only thing I have heard is Buildzoid saying not to exceed .95v for VTT for daily usage. So does that translate into 1.9v being safe to run in DRAM? For SOC I am staying around 1.025v - 1.05125v.
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- ryzen 2
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Wassup guys,so I am planning to build my first ever pc next week and I already got some parts while some of them are on the way.For cpu I chose to go with the r5 2600 along with the asus rog strix b350-f mobo which I will update.But my question is:Will the cpu run well on a b350 or i will have any problems?The problem is that I find b350-f so gorgeous and I can’t to not buy it and I wanna know If is it worth buying a b350 or going with a x370 and why.Oh and also will I have any problems with the g.skill aegis 8gb 3000mhz on this build?Sorry for my bad English tho and thanks for ur time:)
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Hello everyone! Hardware: MSI B350 PC Mate Ryzen 5 2600 KFA2 GTX 1060 OC be quiet! Pure Power 400W 2x 8GB G.Skill Trident DDR4 RGB I have brand new parts here that just arrived yesterday, but I can't get it to work. When I hit the power button, everything seems to be normal. All fans start spinning, the RGB light on the RAM lighs up, and the "Ez Debug LEDs" on the mainboard light up shortly but then go off immediately - according to the manual this says everything is fine. Unfortunately, that's pretty much all that happens, there is no video output at all and I'm stuck with it now. According to a user on reddit, there is an incompatibility with this particular CPU and mainboard which can easily be fixed with a bios update. But how am I supposed to accomplish that without another CPU if I can't reach the bios with this one? What I checked so far: Since I do have another computer, I switched the Graphics Cards and it turns out both work in my computer, but none work in the new one. Same phenomenon without any graphics card attached. The screws and placeholders are all in place and do have connection to the main board. Clearing CMOS didn't show any different result either. Using just one RAM sick didn't show different results, also not using any other possible stick-slot combination Removing the RAM entirely results in the Debug LEDs stating there is an issue with the DRAM Removing the CPU entirely results in the Debug LEDs stating there is an issue with the CPU (so it looks like those are working properly) Leave it running for more than an hour, just in case it just takes a long time for the first boot Do you have any suggestions what I could try next? Or an idea what went wrong? I tried to contact the reseller but they don't have tech support on weekends. Thanks for any kind of help!
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So I'm on a pretty tight budget and I want to upgrade my PC to a Ryzen 2 CPU. I don't however want to buy an expensive X470 motherboard, or buy a B350 and have to do a BIOS update. I would think B450 would have launched with X470 and Ryzen 2, but I don't see these boards anywhere on the market. Are they coming? Any insight would be appreciated.
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So after watching a video here (from Hardware Canucks), I'm not convinced I should buy a 2600 over the 1600 and a B350 motherboard. I feel like the differences in real world performance are so minimal there isn't much of a point, especially with an 800-900$ budget. I won't be able to get that good of a GPU if I go with the 2600 because of the price bumps from the the 1600. So my question is, should I get the 1600/1600X with a better GPU than I could have gotten if I got a 2600 and maybe upgrade to Zen 2/Ryzen 3 next year or should I get the 2600 now and just wait like 2 years before upgrading? I'm kinda feeling the 1600 + better GPU and upgrade in 1 year. In all honesty, the clock speeds and the performance in games that the 1600 gives is something that I'm fine with and is still a tremendous upgrade over what I've been using for sometime, so I really wouldn't mind waiting like an extra 30 seconds for a video to render rather then the huge times I deal with now.
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- ryzen
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Right as i was planning to build my PC, Ryzen released their new CPUs, so of course i'm gonna redo it all. I've looked for mistakes/incompatibilities, and i couldn't seem to find any. If you can, please let me know. Thanks! https://imgur.com/a/9Jkf2Vp
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As we know, running Ryzen 2 CPU's on existing 300-series motherboards will be possible, but only if supported with an updated BIOS. I own a Ryzen-based laptop, the Asus GL702ZC with the Ryzen 7 1700 CPU, operating on the B350 chipset. Since laptop manufacturers don't support their products after launch, it's safe to assume that Asus will release no further BIOS updates for this model, so here's the question: How to find out if the (recently updated) BIOS I'm already running is capable of supporting a Ryzen 7 2700 CPU without having to actually buy the chip and "try it." Is there anything I can look for in terms of feature-level that will help find the answer? For instance, I read somewhere that AGESA version 1.0.0.7 is the requirement to support "future CPU's" and the most recent BIOS update includes AGESA 1.0.0.7. Do I have a shot at running Ryzen 2 with the current BIOS?
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I know that the X470 Motherboards have not launched yet, but so far, has MSI or Gigabyte been a better option for AM4 motherboards? I'm trying to decide between the "X470 Aorus Ultra Gaming" and the "MSI X470 Gaming Plus." Which would you choose based on feature set (which to my eye looks practically the same)/which has better reliability so far with the Ryzen lineup?
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Well, the news is out my friends. Ryzen 2 is on, and it's now available for pre order, how exciting!!! According to The Verge I'm glad that they're not announcing all the details just yet, I always love a surprise on release and I'm sure all those of you reading do too. Now obviously, there's going to be four second generation chips, those will be as follows (taken from The Verge): Great to see that the coolers are on AMD this year across ALL AMD Ryzen CPU's, I'm sure it was a bugger for those of you out there who didn't want to buy a new cooler just for socket AM4 unless you bought one of their higher end solutions. You'll also be unsurprised to know that Now the new X470 chipset, that is VERY interesting to me. Could that be a new enthusiast chipset to overthrow the current enthusiast chipset, X370? I daresay it is and I do think that it would pair beautifully with AMD's new StoreMI feature as now, hybrids are no more when you buy AMD systems. You can have your speed and capacity together, have all that cake at once, your boot drive is now one with your storage once more! Now what do you all think to this exciting information and are you hyped for Ryzen 2? Let me know down in the comments below! Oh right, yeah, the source is here: https://www.theverge.com/circuitbreaker/2018/4/13/17233630/amds-second-generation-ryzen-processors-available-preorder
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I sold my ryzen 7 1800x pc with profit as I bought it at Black Friday. I will probably buy the new upcoming ryzen 7 cpus but I want to know if I buy the ryzen 7 2700 or wait (possibly until next Black Friday or the 4th of July to buy a ryzen 7 2800x in sale for the same price of the stock ryzen 7 2700. Is it worth waiting? Are ryzen 7 2700 or 1700 binned 2800x or 1800x? Thx.
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Note to LMG staff: f this ends up in the WAN Show document, please please refer to me as Jurunce (pronounced Jour-unce), my current username is no longer representative to my actual online handle these days. --- So this caught my ear. TechPowerUp has confirmation that AMD has scheduled this release for Q1 2018 (article is two paragraphs long, so I'll post the article in the quote): All the CPUs are branded as the Ryzen 2000 series (runs on a new architecture codenamed Zen+), this new lineup is slated for a Q1 2018 (January/February/March) release, according to Gamers Nexus in the video which starts at 3:45. No article format of the video can be found at the time of posting, so I'll update it whenever they get around to posting it. This is to be manufactured on GlobalFoundries 12nm LP (which they call Leading Performance), and features improved clock speeds, RAM overclocking, and improved power efficiency. This new iteration of the Zen architecture will run on the new 400 series chipsets, and are backwards compatible with the 300 series chipsets (requires a BIOS update before installing the new CPUs), and it will reuse the AM4 socket. The Zen+ architecture will be split into two codenames: Pinnacle Ridge for the CPUs, and the anticipated Raven Ridge for the APUs. No one is sure whether this will be called Ryzen 2, or it'll be simply referred to as 2nd-gen Ryzen. Gamers Nexus has since posted the article format of the same video. All the information is basically what you'd find in the video, but I'll include the Ryzen news: In an article form from WCCFTech, there's some additional information which I'll quote the good parts below. This is the slide posted in the WCCFTech article. I can't vouch for its authenticity or validity, as its only rumor. Here's some quotes from a Forbes article as well: For my opinion on the matter, this should be good if AMD can breach the typical 4.0 GHz barrier on the cores and the 3200 MHz RAM speed barrier. If that happens, then AMD is more competitive in the single-threaded fight, since Intel has a strong foothold in that area, and games love single-threaded performance, despite a move towards multithreading on the game engine side of things. What I am interested in is the Ryzen Threadripper 2900 series of HEDT CPUs. If I can hear some news or rumors of that launch, then I'll be inclined to hold off upgrading my system for now and wait for that release, since what I do can take advantage of multiple threads, and with supported renderers, even use the CPU alongside the GPU for maximum rendering speeds. Sometimes the ray tracing quality seems better to me when rendered on the CPU. I also want to know if this rumored Ryzen Threadripper 2900 CPUs will reuse the TR4 socket, and backwards compatible with the X399 chipset (requires a BIOS update before installing) with full support for (my educated guess) the X499 chipset. Please don't take my word on Ryzen Threadripper for it, I could be wrong! If I posted this topic after someone else posted it, please delete it. Also my first tech news article posted, so it may be rough around the edges.