edgetrading
Bronze Level Poster
Are there any undervolting tutorials for the ASUS B550 motherboard?
It's the same process on any motherboard, just google, undervolting, it's a method more than something that can be shown.Are there any undervolting tutorials for the ASUS B550 motherboard?
Is the 3600x ok for B550 using the Noctua? My started building this morning so I can't correct anything now, but I downgraded it late last night as I couldn't make my mind up and it had been said numerous times that my cpu (originally 3700x) was more powerful than it should be for my uses.You have combined an absolute monster of a CPU with a very low end board (by comparison),
Thats a relief thenThe 550 is fine for the 3600x...I have a 450 board on my non-x 3600 and it works fine
Is the 3600x ok for B550 using the Noctua? My started building this morning so I can't correct anything now, but I downgraded it late last night as I couldn't make my mind up and it had been said numerous times that my cpu (originally 3700x) was more powerful than it should be for my uses.
Will the noctua be enough to keep it cool? I was going to ask this morning but they started building it before I had chance, unexpected as I got an email saying Monday was the build date. i only changed it as I'd read that my 3700x was too powerful for the 1660 super. so I thought downgrading the cpu and upgrading the gpu made it more evenIt's a bit of a strange combo. With the 3600X and the B550 you have no need for the Noctua. It's a bit of a waste of money as it won't add anything to the build.
Will the noctua be enough to keep it cool? I was going to ask this morning but they started building it before I had chance, unexpected as I got an email saying Monday was the build date. i only changed it as I'd read that my 3700x was too powerful for the 1660 super. so I thought downgrading the cpu and upgrading the gpu made it more even
I managed to find your build from one of your previous threads. I can't stress how important it is to seek advice from the forum before going ahead with such a purchase.
You have combined an absolute monster of a CPU with a very low end board (by comparison), a CPU fan that as much as is advertised to do a fine job will be at its absolute limit all inside a case apparently designed to cook bread in with a passive GPU to simply add to the temps. There is no surprise from me that you are having temperature/fan issues.
Each of these components in solitude will fit together absolutely fine but they have completely differing purposes. The case is fine for normal office/desktop use, the CPU cooler is excellent for mid-level chips (as is the motherboard).
Built together is very ill advised and as much as undervolting may help, I won't personally be getting involved in offering any advice on such a build as I wouldn't want to be linked to any failures or future issues.
The motherboard doesn’t affect performance, so long as it’s the right chipset for the processor. Again with the cooler, so long as you’ve got the right cooler for the processor then boosts will reach what they’re supposed to.My boosts are fine. It gets 4.4-4.5GHz on single threads, and 3.7-3.8GHz across all cores.
Does anyone have comparable numbers for systems with better motherboards and coolers? It would be very useful for potential customers to know how different components can affect performance.
Single Core Speeds with Prime95:
View attachment 17944
All core speeds with Prime95:
View attachment 17946
I'm afraid that's entirely inaccurate from those Prime95 outputs.My boosts are fine. It gets 4.4-4.5GHz on single threads, and 3.7-3.8GHz across all cores.
What sort of performance gain could I expect if I replaced the motherboard with an X570 and got an AIO? The budget isn't really an issue as it's a work machine. But I am really struggling to find any genuine evidence that an X570 and AIO will improve things.
As an example Kitguru benchmarked the 3950x chip to take 123 seconds to run the BMW blender test using a Gigabyte X570 Auros Master and Corsair H100X AIO here, using Blender 2.79b. And reported a 79C temperature for Blender Classroom here.
Anadtech reports a time of 128 seconds using an X570 Taichi and Kraken X62 AIO here.
They don't specify what case they use. Perhaps they use open benches without fans/cases.
I downloaded the software, and it takes 109 seconds on my machine, with CPU temps up to 61C. Ambient temperature in my home is around 25C. I'm not sure why it's a little faster than the published figures, but I checked that I'm using the correct version of Blender. I'm using Linux, so may that causes a small difference.
I also ran the Classroom test, and my max temperature was 62C.
Anyway, given the above, my system seems to be performing in line with other systems.
Do you have any evidence that systems similar to mine fail or are thermal throttled? Have you seen similar systems failing? Is there a chance that you could have made a mistake?