2400G @ 4175MHz opinions? |
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PetrolHead
Groupie Joined: 07 Oct 2015 Status: Offline Points: 403 |
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The link doesn't seem to work. In any case those voltages seem quite high, since 1.35V is supposed to be the safe limit for 24/7 (or 1.4V according to some sources), which means under load you're already near the "limit" (it's not a hard one, of course). But then that voltage also depends on which sensor it's taken from, and the limits may not be exactly the same for Raven Ridge and Summit Ridge. |
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Ryzen 5 1500X, ASRock AB350M Pro4, 2x8 GB G.Skill Trident Z 3466CL16, Sapphire Pulse RX Vega56 8G HBM2, Corsair RM550x, Samsung 960 EVO SSD (NVMe) 250GB, Samsung 850 EVO SSD 500 GB, Windows 10 64-bit
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Xaltar
Moderator Group Joined: 16 May 2015 Location: Europe Status: Offline Points: 24638 |
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The APUs don't use the infinity fabric to link 2 core clusters like other Ryzen CPUs do. This alone will result in better per core performance. Interesting results for sure. I know the R3 and R5 1k series both disable 2 cores from each CCX rather than utilize a single 4 core CCX.
I wonder if the APUs even have the infinity fabric at all?
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PetrolHead
Groupie Joined: 07 Oct 2015 Status: Offline Points: 403 |
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Based on Hardware Unboxed's (somewhat limited) tests, the performance difference between using one CPU complex and two CPU complexes is largely negligible outside synthetic (L3) cache benchmarks.
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Ryzen 5 1500X, ASRock AB350M Pro4, 2x8 GB G.Skill Trident Z 3466CL16, Sapphire Pulse RX Vega56 8G HBM2, Corsair RM550x, Samsung 960 EVO SSD (NVMe) 250GB, Samsung 850 EVO SSD 500 GB, Windows 10 64-bit
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