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I would say that the 2698 V4, having only 4 less cores than the dual 2696 V2 config and also having a higher clock speed and being a 14nm chip, while also not having to deal with numa, is the better pick.

 

But it also depends on software

I WILL find your ITX build thread, and I WILL recommend the SIlverstone Sugo SG13B

 

Primary PC:

i7 8086k - EVGA Z370 Classified K - G.Skill Trident Z RGB - WD SN750 - Jedi Order Titan Xp - Hyper 212 Black (with RGB Riing flair) - EVGA G3 650W - dual booting Windows 11 and Fedora Linux - Black and green theme, Razer brainwashed me.

Draws 400 watts under max load, for reference.

 

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How many watts do I need?

PSU misconceptions, protections explainedgroup reg is bad

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I'd go with the single v4 because of the reasons @Fasauceome gave and due to the fact that you'd use significantly faster DDR4 memory rather than the DDR3 memory you're bound with for the v2 chip. Also apart from the higher clock speed, the IPC of the newer chips is higher, meaning it should be quite a bit faster per core.

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AMD Ryzen 5 3600, Gigabyte RTX 3060TI Gaming OC ProFractal Design Meshify C TG, 2x8GB G.Skill Ripjaws V 3200MHz, MSI B450 Gaming Plus MaxSamsung 850 EVO 512GB, 2TB WD BlueCorsair RM850x, LG 27GL83A-B

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3 minutes ago, martward said:

I'd go with the single v4 because of the reasons @Fasauceome gave and due to the fact that you'd use significantly faster DDR4 memory rather than the DDR3 memory you're bound with for the v2 chip. Also apart from the higher clock speed, the IPC of the newer chips is higher, meaning it should be quite a bit faster per core.

But what I see on youtube, dual E5 is higher on Cinebench R15 

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13 minutes ago, Fasauceome said:

I would say that the 2698 V4, having only 4 less cores than the dual 2696 V2 config and also having a higher clock speed and being a 14nm chip, while also not having to deal with numa, is the better pick.

 

But it also depends on software

But what I see on youtube, dual E5 is higher on Cinebench R15 , I use Keyshot 9

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1 minute ago, Jaechan said:

But what I see on youtube, dual E5 is higher on Cinebench R15 , I use Keyshot 9

Just looked up a forum for Keyshot users asking about the best PC possible for Keyshot, looks like single CPU is recommended above anything else

 

https://www.keyshot.com/forum/index.php?topic=20399.0

 

So that numa issue might slow things down, despite cinebench not having any problems with it

I WILL find your ITX build thread, and I WILL recommend the SIlverstone Sugo SG13B

 

Primary PC:

i7 8086k - EVGA Z370 Classified K - G.Skill Trident Z RGB - WD SN750 - Jedi Order Titan Xp - Hyper 212 Black (with RGB Riing flair) - EVGA G3 650W - dual booting Windows 11 and Fedora Linux - Black and green theme, Razer brainwashed me.

Draws 400 watts under max load, for reference.

 

PSU tier list

How many watts do I need?

PSU misconceptions, protections explainedgroup reg is bad

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3 minutes ago, Fasauceome said:

Just looked up a forum for Keyshot users asking about the best PC possible for Keyshot, looks like single CPU is recommended above anything else

 

https://www.keyshot.com/forum/index.php?topic=20399.0

 

So that numa issue might slow things down, despite cinebench not having any problems with it

oh! 

 

thank you so much !! ^_^

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