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RM550x corsair

CaptainHabib
Go to solution Solved by Zando_,

Should be fine. Manual OCing on the 3600 is eh, you're better off tweaking the boost on that. Nvidia cards are locked down so you can't increase the voltage much at all, so they won't pull much more power than the specs say. You need to be pushing a Vega card or similarly hungry GPU with that CPU before you have any worries. 

Corsair RM550x 80+gold is that good for ryzen 5 3600 and rtx 2070? also i want to oc both of them

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Yeah it's fine

Personal Desktop":

CPU: Intel Core i7 10700K @5ghz |~| Cooling: bq! Dark Rock Pro 4 |~| MOBO: Gigabyte Z490UD ATX|~| RAM: 16gb DDR4 3333mhzCL16 G.Skill Trident Z |~| GPU: RX 6900XT Sapphire Nitro+ |~| PSU: Corsair TX650M 80Plus Gold |~| Boot:  SSD WD Green M.2 2280 240GB |~| Storage: 1x3TB HDD 7200rpm Seagate Barracuda + SanDisk Ultra 3D 1TB |~| Case: Fractal Design Meshify C Mini |~| Display: Toshiba UL7A 4K/60hz |~| OS: Windows 10 Pro.

Luna, the temporary Desktop:

CPU: AMD R9 7950XT  |~| Cooling: bq! Dark Rock 4 Pro |~| MOBO: Gigabyte Aorus Master |~| RAM: 32G Kingston HyperX |~| GPU: AMD Radeon RX 7900XTX (Reference) |~| PSU: Corsair HX1000 80+ Platinum |~| Windows Boot Drive: 2x 512GB (1TB total) Plextor SATA SSD (RAID0 volume) |~| Linux Boot Drive: 500GB Kingston A2000 |~| Storage: 4TB WD Black HDD |~| Case: Cooler Master Silencio S600 |~| Display 1 (leftmost): Eizo (unknown model) 1920x1080 IPS @ 60Hz|~| Display 2 (center): BenQ ZOWIE XL2540 1920x1080 TN @ 240Hz |~| Display 3 (rightmost): Wacom Cintiq Pro 24 3840x2160 IPS @ 60Hz 10-bit |~| OS: Windows 10 Pro (games / art) + Linux (distro: NixOS; programming and daily driver)
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Should be fine. Manual OCing on the 3600 is eh, you're better off tweaking the boost on that. Nvidia cards are locked down so you can't increase the voltage much at all, so they won't pull much more power than the specs say. You need to be pushing a Vega card or similarly hungry GPU with that CPU before you have any worries. 

Intel HEDT and Server platform enthusiasts: Intel HEDT Xeon/i7 Megathread 

 

Main PC 

CPU: i9 7980XE @4.5GHz/1.22v/-2 AVX offset 

Cooler: EKWB Supremacy Block - custom loop w/360mm +280mm rads 

Motherboard: EVGA X299 Dark 

RAM:4x8GB HyperX Predator DDR4 @3200Mhz CL16 

GPU: Nvidia FE 2060 Super/Corsair HydroX 2070 FE block 

Storage:  1TB MP34 + 1TB 970 Evo + 500GB Atom30 + 250GB 960 Evo 

Optical Drives: LG WH14NS40 

PSU: EVGA 1600W T2 

Case & Fans: Corsair 750D Airflow - 3x Noctua iPPC NF-F12 + 4x Noctua iPPC NF-A14 PWM 

OS: Windows 11

 

Display: LG 27UK650-W (4K 60Hz IPS panel)

Mouse: EVGA X17

Keyboard: Corsair K55 RGB

 

Mobile/Work Devices: 2020 M1 MacBook Air (work computer) - iPhone 13 Pro Max - Apple Watch S3

 

Other Misc Devices: iPod Video (Gen 5.5E, 128GB SD card swap, running Rockbox), Nintendo Switch

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Just now, Zando Bob said:

Should be fine. Manual OCing on the 3600 is eh, you're better off tweaking the boost on that. Nvidia cards are locked down so you can't increase the voltage much at all, so they won't pull much more power than the specs say. You need to be pushing a Vega card or similarly hungry GPU with that CPU before you have any worries. 

so better im not ocing my gpu? thanks for info

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Just now, CaptainHabib said:

so better im not ocing my gpu? thanks for info

No, you can OC it just fine. Nvidia won't let you increase the voltage by much so you can't pull too much power, that was my point. You're better off OCing the GPU, then tweaking the boost on the CPU (there's bound to be guides on it). Similar to the 2000 series, the 3600 can't reach an all-core overclock higher than the max boost for a few cores, so unless something is using all 6 cores and 12 threads all the time, you should leave the CPU to boost the cores being used as high as it can, results in better gaming performance. People can tweak the boost and voltages to get it to boost as high and as long as possible, AMD has done a bunch of work squeeze all the performance possible out of the CPU already, so even that may be redundant now. So long as you run Windows 10 1903 and the latest chipset drivers, it works with the Windows scheduler to get the best boost perf possible, this article explains all the tricky stuff AMD did to pull the best out of the CPUs: https://www.extremetech.com/computing/295967-amd-ryzen-7nm-cpus-may-not-hit-maximum-boost-frequency-on-all-cores

Intel HEDT and Server platform enthusiasts: Intel HEDT Xeon/i7 Megathread 

 

Main PC 

CPU: i9 7980XE @4.5GHz/1.22v/-2 AVX offset 

Cooler: EKWB Supremacy Block - custom loop w/360mm +280mm rads 

Motherboard: EVGA X299 Dark 

RAM:4x8GB HyperX Predator DDR4 @3200Mhz CL16 

GPU: Nvidia FE 2060 Super/Corsair HydroX 2070 FE block 

Storage:  1TB MP34 + 1TB 970 Evo + 500GB Atom30 + 250GB 960 Evo 

Optical Drives: LG WH14NS40 

PSU: EVGA 1600W T2 

Case & Fans: Corsair 750D Airflow - 3x Noctua iPPC NF-F12 + 4x Noctua iPPC NF-A14 PWM 

OS: Windows 11

 

Display: LG 27UK650-W (4K 60Hz IPS panel)

Mouse: EVGA X17

Keyboard: Corsair K55 RGB

 

Mobile/Work Devices: 2020 M1 MacBook Air (work computer) - iPhone 13 Pro Max - Apple Watch S3

 

Other Misc Devices: iPod Video (Gen 5.5E, 128GB SD card swap, running Rockbox), Nintendo Switch

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4 minutes ago, Zando Bob said:

No, you can OC it just fine. Nvidia won't let you increase the voltage by much so you can't pull too much power, that was my point. You're better off OCing the GPU, then tweaking the boost on the CPU (there's bound to be guides on it). Similar to the 2000 series, the 3600 can't reach an all-core overclock higher than the max boost for a few cores, so unless something is using all 6 cores and 12 threads all the time, you should leave the CPU to boost the cores being used as high as it can, results in better gaming performance. People can tweak the boost and voltages to get it to boost as high and as long as possible, AMD has done a bunch of work squeeze all the performance possible out of the CPU already, so even that may be redundant now. So long as you run Windows 10 1903 and the latest chipset drivers, it works with the Windows scheduler to get the best boost perf possible, this article explains all the tricky stuff AMD did to pull the best out of the CPUs: https://www.extremetech.com/computing/295967-amd-ryzen-7nm-cpus-may-not-hit-maximum-boost-frequency-on-all-cores

wait , is that mean stock and oc on ryzen 3000 just little bit different? for gaming maybe 3-5 fps? omg thats bad :D maybe i just running on stock xD .

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6 minutes ago, CaptainHabib said:

wait , is that mean stock and oc on ryzen 3000 just little bit different? for gaming maybe 3-5 fps? omg thats bad :D maybe i just running on stock xD .

If you manually OC you may lose a bit of performance in games, I did on my 2700X. I could manually OC that to 4.2Ghz or so all core, but it'll boost one or two cores to 4.35Ghz or higher. Say a game uses 6 cores but only pushes a couple really hard, the boost will clock those higher than if you forced them all to run at the same speed. Unless you're doing a task that always uses all the cores (my 2700X boosted to 3.9-4Ghz under 100% load on all the cores, under that specific workload the manual OC would be faster), you're better letting it boost itself.

Intel HEDT and Server platform enthusiasts: Intel HEDT Xeon/i7 Megathread 

 

Main PC 

CPU: i9 7980XE @4.5GHz/1.22v/-2 AVX offset 

Cooler: EKWB Supremacy Block - custom loop w/360mm +280mm rads 

Motherboard: EVGA X299 Dark 

RAM:4x8GB HyperX Predator DDR4 @3200Mhz CL16 

GPU: Nvidia FE 2060 Super/Corsair HydroX 2070 FE block 

Storage:  1TB MP34 + 1TB 970 Evo + 500GB Atom30 + 250GB 960 Evo 

Optical Drives: LG WH14NS40 

PSU: EVGA 1600W T2 

Case & Fans: Corsair 750D Airflow - 3x Noctua iPPC NF-F12 + 4x Noctua iPPC NF-A14 PWM 

OS: Windows 11

 

Display: LG 27UK650-W (4K 60Hz IPS panel)

Mouse: EVGA X17

Keyboard: Corsair K55 RGB

 

Mobile/Work Devices: 2020 M1 MacBook Air (work computer) - iPhone 13 Pro Max - Apple Watch S3

 

Other Misc Devices: iPod Video (Gen 5.5E, 128GB SD card swap, running Rockbox), Nintendo Switch

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2 minutes ago, Zando Bob said:

If you manually OC you may lose a bit of performance in games, I did on my 2700X. I could manually OC that to 4.2Ghz or so all core, but it'll boost one or two cores to 4.35Ghz or higher. Say a game uses 6 cores but only pushes a couple really hard, the boost will clock those higher than if you forced them all to run at the same speed. Unless you're doing a task that always uses all the cores (my 2700X boosted to 3.9-4Ghz under 100% load on all the cores, under that specific workload the manual OC would be faster), you're better letting it boost itself.

wow man thankyou so much . u so good :D i will learn about that

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