Crazy Efficient: AMD Threadripper 7980X & 7970X CPU Review & Benchmarks

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This review and benchmark of the AMD Threadripper 7980X & 7970X HEDT CPUs tests for power efficiency, thermals, power consumption, Spec Workstation performance, Adobe Premiere and Photoshop performance, rendering, code compile, and more. This is one of the densest CPU reviews we’ve published, and we have an immediate follow-up with a livestream LATER TODAY to show the 96-core 7995WX CPU breaking world records. We re-tested the old Threadripper 3970X and 3960X to include on these charts, but skipped the 5000-series PRO CPUs (as they were not HEDT parts). If we look into doing a review on any 7000 PRO CPUs, we’ll consider adding Xeon and 5000 PRO CPUs to the suite.
Error/correction - There is a typo in some charts where the 3960X's name is next to an erroneous thread count. This does not affect testing or results. Our apologies for the error. Correct count is 24C/48T.
Watch our livestream overclocking the AMD Threadripper 7995WX CPU! Crazy educational too as the engineers who joined us shared a lot of detail: • World Record Overclock...
Find the AMD Threadripper CPU specs here: gamersnexus.net/news/new-amd-...
Watch our coverage of the AMD Threadripper TRX50 & WRX90 motherboards here: • AMD Threadripper Mothe...
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RELATED PRODUCTS [Affiliate Links]
AMD Ryzen Threadripper 7980X CPU on Amazon: geni.us/6HfTHBO
AMD Ryzen Threadripper 7980X CPU on Newegg: howl.me/ck3kepz4Noi
AMD Ryzen Threadripper 7970X CPU on Amazon: geni.us/BvmzcC
Threadripper 7970X on Newegg: howl.me/ck3ke6mSKNy
Intel Core i9-14900K CPU on Amazon: geni.us/Etbz3
NZXT Kraken 360 cooler on Newegg: howl.me/ck2xPHqjNkr
ASUS TRX50 SAGE on Amazon: geni.us/1ViUORq
AMD R9 7950X on Newegg: howl.me/ck2HGLczYCA
TIMESTAMPS
00:00 - Ryzen Threadripper 7980X & 7970X Review
02:04 - A Lot of New Tests
04:14 - Power Consumption Benchmarks
05:34 - Power Efficiency Test
08:31 - Power Per Core
09:12 - Thermals
10:41 - CCD Layout & Die Arrangement
11:36 - Production - Blender
13:07 - Chromium Code Compile
14:21 - File Decompression (CORRECTION in Desc)
15:25 - File Compression
16:43 - Adobe Photoshop
17:35 - Photoshop GPU Score via CPU Limit
18:04 - General Photo Editing Performance
18:15 - Adobe Premiere Video Editing CPU Benchmarks
19:28 - Intraframe Video Performance
20:14 - RAW Video Processing
20:58 - Video GPU (VFX) Effects Score
21:35 - SpecWorkstation CFD, Finance & Biomedical
22:21 - OpenFOAM CFD & CalculiX Benchmarks
23:19 - LAMMPS & NAMD Life Sciences CPU Benchmarks
23:57 - Financial Services CPU Benchmarks (FSI)
24:25 - SpecWS Energy Benchmark
24:42 - GAMING BENCHMARKS
25:04 - Baldur's Gate 3 CPU Benchmarks (1080p & 1440p)
25:50 - Stellaris CPU Simulation Time Benchmarks
26:34 - FFXIV 1080p & 1440p CPU Benchmarks
27:25 - Cyberpunk: Phantom Liberty Framerate
27:49 - F1 2023 CPU Benchmarks
28:35 - Threadripper 7980X Frequency
29:26 - Threadripper 7970X Frequency
29:46 - Wrap-Up & Some Issues
CORRECTION:
14:33 Typo. In some charts, the 3960X's name is next to an erroneous thread count. This does not affect testing or results. Our apologies for the error. Correct count is 24C/48T.
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Links to Amazon and Newegg are typically monetized on our channel (affiliate links) and may return a commission of sales to us from the retailer. This is unrelated to the product manufacturer. Any advertisements or sponsorships are disclosed within the video ("this video is brought to you by") and above the fold in the description. We do not ever produce paid content or "sponsored content" (meaning that the content is our idea and is not funded externally aside from whatever ad placement is in the beginning) and we do not ever charge manufacturers for coverage.
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Steve Burke | Test Lead, Writing, Host
Patrick Lathan | Testing, Research
Mike Gaglione | Video Editing
Jeremy Clayton | Testing
Vitalii Makhnovets | Camera, Video Production

Пікірлер: 1 200

  • @GamersNexus
    @GamersNexus7 ай бұрын

    Watch our livestream overclocking the AMD Threadripper 7995WX CPU! Crazy educational too as the engineers who joined us shared a lot of detail: kzread.info/dash/bejne/qIllmZuYk92pnrg.html Error/correction - There is a typo in some charts where the 3960X's name is next to an erroneous thread count. This does not affect testing or results. Our apologies for the error. Correct count is 24C/48T. Watch our coverage of the AMD Threadripper TRX50 & WRX90 motherboards here: kzread.info/dash/bejne/gIiiuKSCdbPgYdo.html Find the AMD Threadripper CPU specs here: gamersnexus.net/news/new-amd-threadripper-7980x-7970x-7960x-threadripper-pro-cpus-announced Support our testing and grab a solder & project mat, modmat, or toolkit on the GN store! store.gamersnexus.net/ (currently 10% off at time of posting!)

  • @johnnypopstar

    @johnnypopstar

    7 ай бұрын

    Fingers crossed from across the pond that "later today" doesn't mean _too_ much later, because this is definitely something I want to catch

  • @jorgeaugusto6076

    @jorgeaugusto6076

    7 ай бұрын

    This gonna be fun!

  • @1carusGG

    @1carusGG

    7 ай бұрын

    DO you think that Adobe still gives preferential treatment to Intel CPU's over AMD?

  • @spg3331

    @spg3331

    7 ай бұрын

    YES!!!

  • @islandfireballkill

    @islandfireballkill

    7 ай бұрын

    What kind of nonsense statement is time tbd. At least give a range?

  • @andyastrand
    @andyastrand7 ай бұрын

    I wonder if Adobe will ever write something that threads efficiently

  • @GamersNexus

    @GamersNexus

    7 ай бұрын

    That'd certainly be nice for us. Resolve apparently does well here, though we haven't used it yet!

  • @sirmonkey1985

    @sirmonkey1985

    7 ай бұрын

    nah, they pretty much moved their focus to hardware acceleration w/ quick sync support 3 or 4 years ago.

  • @xamanto

    @xamanto

    7 ай бұрын

    lol. lmao, even.

  • @Splarkszter

    @Splarkszter

    7 ай бұрын

    Adobe sucks anyway, i don't know why people keep using that overpriced crap.

  • @madant7777

    @madant7777

    7 ай бұрын

    Maybe when Intel stops paying them...

  • @brandoncoventry5662
    @brandoncoventry56627 ай бұрын

    I'm in the world of molecular dynamics and I regret to inform you that NAMD is unfortunately pronounced "NAM-Dee". Major props for running these simulations, they are not easy to setup. Extremely helpful to me as I plan out lab computers.

  • @GamersNexus

    @GamersNexus

    7 ай бұрын

    I couldn't keep saying "N-A-M-D" and had to put my foot down! haha, thanks for the info, will use for next time. Are those tests useful in figuring things out for your field? It'll help us determine if we keep running them!

  • @brandoncoventry5662

    @brandoncoventry5662

    7 ай бұрын

    @@GamersNexus Totally! Took me about 2 years to finally figure out the "correct" pronunciation. And absolutely! These are ridiculously helpful as documentation and testing of these programs on different hardware is at best limited and mostly nonexistent. You all are the only ones putting up bench marks with these tools, and for that I am extremely grateful!

  • @Alklaine

    @Alklaine

    7 ай бұрын

    ​@@brandoncoventry5662Do you know how these metrics relate to real-world benefit to you/your field, since you said they are hard to come by? Like is it a 1:1 if its 30% better in a benchmark you can expect somewhere around 30% gains in real world application? Interested to know how much one metric is more important than another!

  • @radutazu

    @radutazu

    7 ай бұрын

    ​@@GamersNexusLots of thanks for including these tests. I also work daily with molecular simulation software and can vouch to these tests being super useful for planning upgrades to workstations and compute clusters. Would it be possible to have some similar tests in the future for GPUs as well? Consumer grade GPUs perform extremely well in software such as GROMACS, but finding benchmarks for it is extremely difficult.

  • @eric.is.online

    @eric.is.online

    7 ай бұрын

    @@radutazu oh god yes, this would be amazing. I run AMBER mostly in my day job but I'll take any GPU benchmarks for MD.

  • @lonelyone69
    @lonelyone697 ай бұрын

    AMD's focus on efficiency has been insane when you think about how they're punching chips with 2,3,4 times the power draw.

  • @xXFlameHaze92Xx

    @xXFlameHaze92Xx

    7 ай бұрын

    and thats why nobody in server market seeks Epyc as an Option. Because what matter efficiency when you need to pay also penalty fees for power overconsuption on at least 20 states

  • @PanduPoluan

    @PanduPoluan

    7 ай бұрын

    ​@@xXFlameHaze92XxYou don't make any sense. Intel Xeons consume even more power, so companies choosing them will be penalized even more.

  • @lonelyone69

    @lonelyone69

    7 ай бұрын

    @@xXFlameHaze92Xx EPYC has literally been AMDs largest commercial success outside of their playstation deal...... Server share has went up 10% in the last 3 years alone....

  • @garrettkajmowicz

    @garrettkajmowicz

    7 ай бұрын

    Not too long ago it was Intel that was more efficient. Somehow AMD has managed to become the king of everything in the CPU world.

  • @marcogenovesi8570

    @marcogenovesi8570

    7 ай бұрын

    @@xXFlameHaze92Xx sorry what? do you know what efficiency means

  • @literallyme5092
    @literallyme50927 ай бұрын

    Finally, some new gaming benchmarks

  • @AyoKeito

    @AyoKeito

    7 ай бұрын

    I seriously wish it would be closer to 7950 in gaming, rather than my current 5950. If that was the case, i'd change platform simply to install more GPUs for other tasks while i'd still be able to game at pretty much best performance. But unfortunately current results show it's still more sensible to run a different PC for more GPUs. It's a shame, i was ready to shill out a stack of cash! 🥲

  • @Splarkszter

    @Splarkszter

    7 ай бұрын

    ​@@AyoKeito If you just increase the graphics you don't even need to bother about that, and remember the why it runs like that is because of the frecuency. Anyway, it's waaay cheaper to just have multiple Desktop systems if you aren't a server company struggling to fit more computers on the same building.

  • @fleurdewin7958

    @fleurdewin7958

    7 ай бұрын

    Threadripper has always suffer from higher memory latency than the consumer range Ryzen. Even in Zen 2 Threadripper, they are always +8ns memory latency from regular Zen 2 Ryzen with the same memory timings in AIDA64. Games love low latency memory. And mandatory use of Registered DIMM on TR 7000 series hurts memory latency even more.

  • @AceStrife

    @AceStrife

    7 ай бұрын

    @@Splarkszter "If you just increase the graphics" Sorry, this is a fallacy. GPU performance will always top out at something; you can't possibly increase it any further. And if you do (ie; 8k downsampling), you're just dragging the overall performance down from something it could've been instead (ie 60 fps vs 120fps). This is even more important in emulation, which is extremely CPU dependent for good performance. As someone with a 4090 and 5950x (waiting for 8000x3d), I am constantly CPU limited while trying to reach 120Hz, irrespective of graphics options. And RT just drops it down even further because it still depends a lot on the CPU. If all you have is a 15 year old 60Hz monitor, then sure, that's a different discussion. But anyone playing modern PC games in an era of 500Hz monitors is probably expecting 120Hz+, and both the GPU and CPU need to be strong for this to happen. All of GN's CPU benchmark graphs show this issue very clearly. Wish they'd run some emulation tests though; no outlet I know of does this.

  • @jogeem5480

    @jogeem5480

    7 ай бұрын

    ​@@AceStrifeIt's funny how 120+ is very little to ask from some games while for others it's near impossible to reach with reasonable settings

  • @Mpdarkguy
    @Mpdarkguy7 ай бұрын

    I love how in less than 30 seconds you went from “wow it’s so efficient” to the LN2 tank. It’s a long way down that efficiency curve isn’t it lol

  • @GamersNexus

    @GamersNexus

    7 ай бұрын

    But there's so much room to make it faster and pull 1200W! We have to do it!

  • @Benethen_

    @Benethen_

    7 ай бұрын

    ​@@GamersNexus finally a competitor to Intel's chilled 5GHz 28-Core CPU

  • @RadarLeon

    @RadarLeon

    7 ай бұрын

    @@GamersNexus will be looking forward to this those numbers are going to be insane

  • @Mpdarkguy

    @Mpdarkguy

    7 ай бұрын

    @@GamersNexusmake sure you guys try out cities skylines 2 for maximum efficiency benchmarking

  • @poppyrider5541

    @poppyrider5541

    7 ай бұрын

    @@GamersNexus Predictions?

  • @WayStedYou
    @WayStedYou7 ай бұрын

    You know it's serious when Steve whips out the whiteboard.

  • @lldjslim

    @lldjslim

    7 ай бұрын

    Who is going to be the first lollipop 🍭 sucker that buys a threadripper cpu just for gaming only?

  • @justahologram2230

    @justahologram2230

    7 ай бұрын

    ​@@lldjslimthat might be jaystwocents plan for the next iteration of skunkworks

  • @desertfish74

    @desertfish74

    7 ай бұрын

    Thanks Steve!

  • @scarletspidernz

    @scarletspidernz

    7 ай бұрын

    @@justahologram2230 nah Phil might get it so that video editing/rendering time goes down

  • @equinoxe3d

    @equinoxe3d

    7 ай бұрын

    @@justahologram2230 Nope, he said the horrible gaming performance discarded it for Skunkworks, especially since it's his daily driver at home for gaming/streaming

  • @POLARTTYRTM
    @POLARTTYRTM7 ай бұрын

    I really loved the part "we don't know what the numbers mean but they're here". Honesty.

  • @GamersNexus

    @GamersNexus

    7 ай бұрын

    In the very least, we know how to run a test even if the software is foreign to us. Hoping the community lets us know which of those are useful so we can incorporate them fully!

  • @CapaNoisyCapa

    @CapaNoisyCapa

    7 ай бұрын

    I'm part of the fantasy world of Finance, and I sincerely hope the Science guys know what they're doing. We definitely do not. The FSI bench is measuring HFT in equity markets, particularly derivatives, I suppose. HFT strategy and algorithmic implementation must be unique for each operator for it to work. I'm not even remotely qualified to give a ten minutes power-point presentation about it, but I don't see any practical reasons for this test, at least in theory. I'm probably missing something obvious here, so please feel free to correct me.

  • @niklasnelimarkka2993

    @niklasnelimarkka2993

    7 ай бұрын

    The numbers Mason, what do they mean!

  • @greebj

    @greebj

    7 ай бұрын

    Being able to turn something you know nothing about into KPIs you can discuss confidently sounds like Steve missed his calling in marketing, but then I realised he's just too honest for it

  • @blar2112
    @blar21127 ай бұрын

    full size performance cores running at 3.5w each is extremely impressive, this is borderline high performance big ARM cores

  • @Azureskies01

    @Azureskies01

    7 ай бұрын

    Wendell (level 1 techs) found the EPYC 128 core chip was using just over 1w per core. ARM is dead as long as AMD keeps this up.

  • @blar2112

    @blar2112

    7 ай бұрын

    @@Azureskies01 Wow I feel pity for intel trying all that finicky E core stuff and then AMD performs better in low thread tasks as they have the better performing cores and then again AMD performs better in high thread tasks as all their threads are all full performance cores...

  • @sryfshkbfyi

    @sryfshkbfyi

    7 ай бұрын

    ​@@blar2112yeah, it seems silly, they just can't compete with the TSMC cutting-edge processes. And I see it as a generally bad direction of things, because consumers benefits from a healthy competition. Otherwise it's just a monopoly. I really want Intel to succeed in their ventures and be competitive. But it's seems like cutting-edge electronics fabrication is so expensive process, that it's will be impossible to push progress 'forever' without some sort of technology consolidation in a single entity.

  • @Splarkszter

    @Splarkszter

    7 ай бұрын

    ARM is pretty interesting by itself. You wouldn't want ARM to die tho, there is a reason the x86 platform is focusing on efficiency. DON'T LET COMPETITION DIE, BE STRATEGIC.

  • @blar2112

    @blar2112

    7 ай бұрын

    @@Splarkszter Agree, ARM is cool

  • @Belsen85
    @Belsen857 ай бұрын

    As a person who works with FEM and partly CFD, I really, really appreciate the new tests! Thank you very much!

  • @GamersNexus

    @GamersNexus

    7 ай бұрын

    Awesome! Which of those were most useful to you? We're not familiar with a lot of the software in that space, so it'd help us tune benchmarks!

  • @Belsen85

    @Belsen85

    7 ай бұрын

    @@GamersNexus if we talk about the tests in this video: CalculiX and openFOAM tests. The software that I used daily: Ansys Mechanical, Ansys Fluent and Abaqus Standard/Explicit. The problem is that the licenses are VERY expensive (tens of thousands dollars per year). So the only reasonable way to add them to the testing (actually, Fluent can utilize GPUs for calculations, not only CPUs): is to ask Ansys Inc. and Abaqus Inc. to give you free licenses for testing purposes. I hope that you are famous enough at YT to get them interested.

  • @patrickl9930

    @patrickl9930

    7 ай бұрын

    @@GamersNexus SideFX Houdini would be the most applicable for vfx pros, ie the Threadripper target market. VFXArabia has a Houdini benchmark file that tests various simulation types (grain sims, FLIP fluids etc) and has been our only real measuring stick.

  • @Soporific45564

    @Soporific45564

    7 ай бұрын

    @@GamersNexus I also work with CFD, though not the tested codes. Most recommendations for CPUs in my industry has been max 4 cores per memory channel and after that things doesn't scale anymore. On my wish list for Christmas I'd like to see some tests for scaling. Also just raw performance per dollar. Also compared to the Xeons, which are the reigning champs.

  • @RodrigoSilva-xf9ms

    @RodrigoSilva-xf9ms

    7 ай бұрын

    @@GamersNexus OpenFOAM is one of the most versatile codes for CFD, I've using it for the last 10 years. Performance depends on the chosen linear system solvers. In extreme applications, memory bandwidth used to be the bottleneck (sometimes latency as well). DDR5 kinda solved this problems for AMD Ryzen and Intel Core family (I mean, 16 core CPU, multithread isn't a big deal for CFD), but it seems like 4 channel memory is again a bottleneck for Threadripper. Maybe you find a double performance on the 8 channel Threadripper Pro

  • @sephondranzer
    @sephondranzer7 ай бұрын

    Steve: I’m gonna call you all out… Me: Hold that thought GN, I need to skip to the gaming section

  • @Warren_Elrod
    @Warren_Elrod7 ай бұрын

    Hey GN, noob thought here, if you ran 2 tests at the same time, would that give different insight into the 32 to 64 core scaling?

  • @GamersNexus

    @GamersNexus

    7 ай бұрын

    That's an interesting thought. Yes. It would definitely change the dynamic: If you were bound to 32 cores max in some application, you could theoretically run 2 instances of it and increase the throughput. Handbrake is a good example of this: You could spawn multiple Handbrake instances with more cores. Great question - thanks for posting!

  • @whycouldntthebicyclestandup

    @whycouldntthebicyclestandup

    7 ай бұрын

    ​​@@GamersNexuscould you set core affinity in widows and run two or four "normal" all core benchmarks? Would be interesting to see if tasks are across chiplets etc

  • @Splarkszter

    @Splarkszter

    7 ай бұрын

    Yup, virtualization is a very cool thing. Sometimes there may be some schenanigans but if you run a Linux based OS made for that you could run multiple single-core-heavy tasks at the same time for example.

  • @user9267

    @user9267

    7 ай бұрын

    ​@@Splarkszter That would change boost behavior

  • @KenS1267

    @KenS1267

    7 ай бұрын

    It's not really applicable to workstation CPU's, I'm not 100% sure why such high core count workstation CPU's even exist, but in servers virtualization is a prime use for such high core count parts. There are a couple of virtualization benchmark suites out there that might be relevant, assuming virtualization isn't disabled on these CPU's.

  • @nathanfay1988
    @nathanfay19887 ай бұрын

    Sorry Steve, but the channel is called Gamer's Nexus instead of Productivity Nexus, so naturally we are drawn to gaming benchmarks :)

  • @GamersNexus

    @GamersNexus

    7 ай бұрын

    Channel rename on April 1?!

  • @user-ke1gn3ql1g

    @user-ke1gn3ql1g

    7 ай бұрын

    ​@@GamersNexus Nerds Nexus would be funny. Bonus points if you add this thing 🤓 lol

  • @urmensch12
    @urmensch127 ай бұрын

    The disclaimer doesn't stop me from wanting an 64 core threadripper for an gaming first Pc

  • @InternetListener

    @InternetListener

    7 ай бұрын

    to run Flight Simulator below 2% cpu usage.

  • @hueanao

    @hueanao

    7 ай бұрын

    I hope that in the future we see some games optimized to lots of cores. Would be interesting, for example, to have a massive grid on a racing game where each AI has it's own dedicated thread.

  • @aRealAndHumanManThing

    @aRealAndHumanManThing

    7 ай бұрын

    ​@@hueanaoor using the efficiency core concept from Intel to add some sort of parallel computing ability to your cpu. Just imagine what graphics would be possible if you'd be able to outsource sth like ray tracing to mostly underused parts. I don't know enough about this stuff for more in depth ideas, but it seems like a logical point for improvement

  • @deansmits006

    @deansmits006

    7 ай бұрын

    Or try an Epyx-X server CPU, has the extra L3 cache! It's gotta pull big gaming numbers, right? Right?

  • @xXx_Regulus_xXx

    @xXx_Regulus_xXx

    7 ай бұрын

    "I know this product is not for my use case, but I want to signal to corporations that I'll buy it even though the value proposition is objectively bad"

  • @blahblahblah1787
    @blahblahblah17877 ай бұрын

    Main benefit of Threadripper is the substantial bump in pci lanes and no longer having to deal with that "if I want to use 3x nvme drives the pci slot gets disabled" nonsense.

  • @deadmanshand4138

    @deadmanshand4138

    7 ай бұрын

    This. The ONLY reason I would want the TR is for the lanes.

  • @TonkarzOfSolSystem

    @TonkarzOfSolSystem

    7 ай бұрын

    Seems like there’s a hole in the market for “lane ripper”.

  • @vinnyveritas9599

    @vinnyveritas9599

    7 ай бұрын

    That's a hefty price to pay for PCI lanes.

  • @terrylyn
    @terrylyn7 ай бұрын

    Thanks for bringing back the code compilation benchmark, there are huge number of programmers who like their binaries served quickly.

  • @beeman4266
    @beeman42667 ай бұрын

    I'm almost more impressed by the 7800x3d being right behind the 7980x in efficiency. That's crazy considering it's the best gaming cpu on the market.

  • @Mom19

    @Mom19

    7 ай бұрын

    If you think about it, it actually makes sense though. X3D was originally meant to be for Server use only. So my guess would be that a X3D CPU is actually getting a bit "worse" or "better" server grade chiplets than a normal CPU or Server gets. I really wonder how efficient their best chiplets can be though. I'm sure there is still some wiggle to room to get even better CCDs in terms of efficiency

  • @mikefarino4368

    @mikefarino4368

    7 ай бұрын

    ⁠the 128 core bergimo server chip uses around 1 watt per core. Now that is a chip with less cache and designed for efficiency, but it's absolutely insane what Amd was able to do using it

  • @bhume7535

    @bhume7535

    7 ай бұрын

    ​@@Mom19the X3D isn't specific to certain chiplets though. Every chiplet has the interconnect to smack an X3D onto it.

  • @morosis82

    @morosis82

    7 ай бұрын

    ​@@Mom19and where the use cases benefit from the stacked cache in the HPC market they can get 2 or 3x performance gains in some cases.

  • @Fay7666

    @Fay7666

    7 ай бұрын

    Everyone here seems to forget that because the X3D is well... 3D meaning stacked on top of one another, and with the cache having very specific voltage & heat tolerances means that the CPUs can't be run in a higher power configuration compared to non-3D variants which do better in scenarios where cache isn't as important.

  • @scottg7321
    @scottg73217 ай бұрын

    23:59 I am technically part of this industry as a quant. In this industry the models are sometimes by firms who need the calculations faster than other firms so they can arbitrage first. But more often than not other models are calculated with similar methods so I imagine these benchmarks are useful. Also, although there are many types of Monte-Carlo simulations, there is really only one type used for time series so the benchmark is probably using that one. However, I am not too familiar with the details of the benchmark you provided so I couldn't say anything for certain about it. Lmk if ya'll have any questions

  • @bentomo
    @bentomo7 ай бұрын

    Having the written review along side the video is fantastic, I can jump back and look at the previous data. Thanks for providing written media AND video on important server stuff like this!

  • @bentomo

    @bentomo

    7 ай бұрын

    Also thanks for adding the SPEC benchmarks!

  • @FlyingShoe
    @FlyingShoe7 ай бұрын

    Thanks! Have been waiting on the new Threadrippers for a while now.

  • @GadgetryTech
    @GadgetryTech7 ай бұрын

    Amazing video as always. AMD’s work per watt improvement has been amazing. I can’t wait to see what Zen 5 does next year!

  • @chromerims
    @chromerims7 ай бұрын

    I ran pieces of Black-Scholes and binomial pricing by hand a loooong time ago. 7980X is very impressive. Only those reviews of ThreadRipper and HEDT cpus that include SPEC perf testing are worth the time to watch/read. 👍 Thank you, Steve/GN for doing it right. I can tell you that professionals seriously considering these TR cpus, while not loving the price, are giving them a hard look . . . with many eventually buying to stay competitive or leap ahead as a professional.

  • @Cypherdude1

    @Cypherdude1

    7 ай бұрын

    When you ran Black-Scholes, did you use an HP programmable calculator? Another useful feature of the ThreadRipper Pro series is the number of PCIe lanes, 128.

  • @chromerims

    @chromerims

    7 ай бұрын

    @@Cypherdude1 👍 Probably my fingers . . . and toes. Plus duct tape. Seriously, yeah. Probably had a calculator and lotus123. I'm nearly but not quite 'visicalc' old.

  • @chromerims

    @chromerims

    7 ай бұрын

    ​@@Cypherdude1 I might also add that octa-channel Ram on the PRO versions of Threadripper upcoming are going to be even more straight fire 🔥

  • @theicebeardk
    @theicebeardk7 ай бұрын

    Thanks GN for the test results. With the ECC enabled for the regular ThreadRippers this proves to me that they are a viable alternative for a workstation for software developers rather than CAD or simulation stuff. For those sort of workloads you need a high core count (and great I/O) and as proven by the valuable Chrome compile test a switch from the existing Threadripper and older Threadripper pro desktops for developers would translate directly to higher potential productivity for those working on projects of that sort. For those sort of workstations the cost is not the issue most of the time. Personally since I do make money with my PC but also use it to game in the evenings the Threadrippers are now on my to buy list some time in Q1 next year likely. As for cooling this looks like a fit for the Icegiant cooler or an AIO from alphacool (which is what I use now).

  • @ivimas_

    @ivimas_

    7 ай бұрын

    As a software engineer, I'm inclined to think the real world benefit for development work/code compilation is rather minimal compared to something like the 7950X. The reason being that you mostly don't compile the whole project when you're working on it, only the modified parts, and so the time required is likely to be very similar for both processors. A more server-like deployment would make more sense, if you can keep feeding it enough work to actually pay itself off.

  • @ImPDK
    @ImPDK7 ай бұрын

    Thanks for testing such a wide range of software. As the "PC specialist" of my friend groups it's good to be able to give more informed advice

  • @ellejharmsen4801
    @ellejharmsen48017 ай бұрын

    As a molecular simulation PhD, I also loved seeing these workstation tests included. Especially Lammps is really relevant for me. I actually think that the testcase in lammps is also molecular dynamics (just like namd). They just implemented some of the calculations/parallizing different. What might be important to note is that in my field we topically run simulation 3 till 5 times with identical settings, just different initial configurations (results here have statistical value). So to me seeing the results of the 32cores compared to the 64 cores set up as 2 simulations next to each other would be very informative as well. (Or both running 16 thread simulations up till the cpu is 100% loaded would be good too). I would be interested in what the CFD people here would think of that.

  • @imjust_a
    @imjust_a7 ай бұрын

    Would love to see Unreal Engine project packaging and shader compilation added to these tests. UE does some weird stuff behind the scenes that causes it to deviate from the expectations set by the code compilation tests. I've been looking into making a high-end build server for Unreal projects, but I've been having a tough time finding data on Unreal with high end parts.

  • @sorakagami

    @sorakagami

    6 ай бұрын

    Good point there! As a game dev I would also like to see how these new AMD Threadrippers fare for shader compilations & packaging.

  • @WatchWatchlist
    @WatchWatchlist8 күн бұрын

    I was searching for some build information relating to Monte Carlo simulations. My current build really can't support a lot, so I really appreciate that new segment. I haven't been on this channel in a few years, but I remember some great memories from my high school gamer days. It's cool to see you still making videos.

  • @khatdubell
    @khatdubell7 ай бұрын

    Glad to see the compilation benchmark.

  • @RFC3514
    @RFC35147 ай бұрын

    For 3D rendering tests, and since nearly all 3D renderers these days support network rendering, it would be interesting to see how one of these systems compares (in terms of price, performance and power consumption) with two or four render nodes using regular AM5 CPUs.

  • @johiahdoesstuff1614
    @johiahdoesstuff16147 ай бұрын

    A 96 core cpu would be pretty incredible for server purposes, yeah? Like for Eve Online, you could host 2 solar systems on a thread each on one core for 192 systems on a cpu with tons of headrooms for having many players connected?

  • @dead-claudia

    @dead-claudia

    7 ай бұрын

    precisely why epyc cpus are so wildly popular for servers with high compute requirements 🙂

  • @billy65bob
    @billy65bob7 ай бұрын

    I appreciate you including gaming benchmarks. I'm been an early adopter of a 1950X, and I've been wanting to upgrade it for a while. 😃 Like Wendell I use it for a gaming VM, so I am intrigued to see that jumping to one of these will more than double the framerates I get, even with the additional threads going completely unused.

  • @colin_actually
    @colin_actually7 ай бұрын

    Nice to see crazy (in a good way) numbers once in a while!

  • @TomaszWiszkowski
    @TomaszWiszkowski7 ай бұрын

    Thank you for three excellent video! It's super exciting to see the return of HEDT CPUs from AMD. I really miss the 3990X on these charts.. 3970X vs 7980X is not exactly the right comparison generation-wise... I appreciate the highlight of the 3970X v 7970X, which kind of captures what could be expected. Fantastic video!

  • @vali69
    @vali697 ай бұрын

    You know maybe the best benchmark for these cpus would be compiling gentoo.

  • @GamersNexus

    @GamersNexus

    7 ай бұрын

    We can look into that!

  • @arek314

    @arek314

    7 ай бұрын

    @@GamersNexusyes, please!

  • @reav3rtm

    @reav3rtm

    7 ай бұрын

    As Gentoo user (and developer).. many compilation tasks are not well parallelized. For many projects a lot of time is spent in configure phase that is sequential. And packages alone are merged sequentially. I would say compilation tests are enough. Whole distro compilation is maybe use case for distribution maintainers but it's really very rare use case for typical user. Some really large projects that can benefit, like Chromium, require also lots of RAM for that many parallel compilation tasks. (however I don't want to be gatekeeping)

  • @vali69

    @vali69

    7 ай бұрын

    @@reav3rtm to be honest I was just thinking about how funny it would be to have that as a benchmark, since yeah it's pretty much a long compilation test that can take days on some less powerful/mid range cpus and depending on packages installed, so I shared that thought. You don't want to know how shocked I was that gn actually responded and even said they'd look into it!

  • @arek314

    @arek314

    7 ай бұрын

    @reav3rtm while it might be true, I know from the Internet what's the usual Gentoo specialist outfit. And I really want to see Steve in knee high socks..

  • @dixonsoftwaresolutions5031
    @dixonsoftwaresolutions50317 ай бұрын

    Hi GN, the financial benchmarks are absolutely helpful to me. It's good to see the nearly linear scaling. That has been my experience as well. As long as there isn't a memory bandwidth issue, a lot of financial calculations are embarrassingly parallel. Looks like it's time to upgrade!

  • @AdamariMedia
    @AdamariMedia7 ай бұрын

    Excited for the livestream later today!

  • @olnnn
    @olnnn7 ай бұрын

    Wonder how this stacks up to high core count ARM CPUS like the Ampere Altra since they've started experimenting with making workstation stuff based around it as demoed by Jeff Geerling (and for that matter Apple's M3 Ultra whenever that comes out)

  • @TheNerd
    @TheNerd7 ай бұрын

    I think Photoshop realized the power and speed of 64 Zen 4 cores and said: "Not even Chuck Norris has this much Power" and closed itself in an early defeat.

  • @desertfish74

    @desertfish74

    7 ай бұрын

    Adobe holding back the industry for decades now and going strong!

  • @leviathanpriim3951
    @leviathanpriim39517 ай бұрын

    watched this after L1T Wendells vid, interesting to see the different testing and feature explanations. this set looks great for this review as well

  • @Pitipicqou
    @Pitipicqou7 ай бұрын

    Thanks for the detailed review as always! Are you planning on a thorough review of the 7960X as well? Especially if you're interested in video production workloads, the 7960X looks on paper like it might hit a sweet spot: you get the lanes of Threadripper for a second GPU, dedicated video output, high speed networking or storage, and higher clocks than the 7970X or 7980X, at a much lower cost (according to Puget, the 5965WX was almost tied with the higher tier 5th gen Threadripper for content creation). Those features would make it the ideal CPU for a lot of video professionnals. The inclusion of Resolve benchmarks would also be really cool, although your test suite is already a lot of work, it might help out quite a bit of people

  • @joachimart
    @joachimart7 ай бұрын

    Thank you. I was hoping for more single core testing, due to the experience of using the cpu in programs. I have a 3970X and was hoping to see if the 7970x would be closer to a 14900K or similar in After effects etc compared to the 3970X - Because a lot of threadripper users still need good single core performance in addition to the multicore - since these are not meant for servers (I use mine for Corona rendering + photoshop and after effects). . A regular Cinebench single core comparison would have been sufficient. But, based on your photoshop benchmark I guess one can expect slightly better than 3rd gen threadripper but nothing near 14900K...So I will wait and see how Arrow Lake and Intels 5nm lineup will hold up and ifIntel will give us a better multicore offer - before buying another threadripper. Nobody knows if AMD will keep supporting it anyway.

  • @leo_stanek

    @leo_stanek

    7 ай бұрын

    Anandtech has numbers which suggest in a single-threaded workload the 7970X is about 3% below a 12900k or about 15% below a 14900k.

  • @joachimart

    @joachimart

    7 ай бұрын

    @@leo_stanek thanks! yeah not bad. definately better than 3970X.

  • @yuuji_
    @yuuji_7 ай бұрын

    Could we have a ryzen 9 3950x revisit ? I'd like to see what the 1st consumer 16 core cpu can do against the newer cpu

  • @Krakenfall
    @Krakenfall7 ай бұрын

    Again, thank you for excellent coverage. I was facepalming when these threadripper CPUs were announced because I had JUST streamed my 7950X/AM5 upgrade build. I do gaming, editing, and ML workloads, so when I realized most X670 motherboards don't even run two full bandwidth x16 slots, I really thought I messed up not going for threadripper. With this review, I now know threadripper isn't exactly the magic bullet I was looking for with my use case. I guess I'll have to spread out my high-bandwidth PCIE components to my stream PC and make it up with 10G network cards or something. Ugh

  • @vkiwi2429
    @vkiwi24297 ай бұрын

    Thanks Steve n team, this helps heaps with my cost benefit forms for management. they want to see number/bar go up mean workers work harder/less downtime

  • @autoglobus
    @autoglobus7 ай бұрын

    The gaming part starts at 24:40 .

  • @mikezappulla4092

    @mikezappulla4092

    7 ай бұрын

    He said in the video not to do this. lol.

  • @GamersNexus

    @GamersNexus

    7 ай бұрын

    hahaha

  • @benchoflemons398

    @benchoflemons398

    7 ай бұрын

    3:20

  • @jacpas2012

    @jacpas2012

    7 ай бұрын

    I will use all 1200W to play minesweeper and no one can stop me!

  • @thentil

    @thentil

    7 ай бұрын

    Not even competitive waste of sand 😂

  • @Azureskies01
    @Azureskies017 ай бұрын

    AMD's server products are the most efficient chips to have ever been made. They are burning clean and running on all cylinders. Now if only their GPU division could be as amazing.

  • @dogdie147

    @dogdie147

    7 ай бұрын

    All of the money are being gobbled up by the Ryzen team. The Radeon team is so incompetent they couldn’t even market a main seller feature right which is fking sad😢

  • @Azureskies01

    @Azureskies01

    7 ай бұрын

    @@dogdie147 They are doing what they need to do on the hardware side even with RDNA3 not being as proficient as they might have projected. Their driver (and whole software side) is the real lacking division. My 7900XT shouldn't be pulling over 100 watts when I wanna load up Oblivion without mods and it is only doing that because the card ....for whatever reason needs to run its VRAM at full frequency (which causes the card to draw ~90-100 watts itself). Hell the reason why the the idle power consumption was an issue (and still kind of is) was because of the cards not clocking down the VRAM lower than 909 (or max frequency) mhz

  • @bocahdongo7769

    @bocahdongo7769

    7 ай бұрын

    Those RDNA GPU is actually CRAZY efficient if you know how to do undervolting If

  • @sammiller6631

    @sammiller6631

    7 ай бұрын

    AMD's GPU division could be running on all cylinders and most _gamers will still not buy anything but Nvidia_ because Nvidia's manipulative marketing is very strong. The fear of missing out is too strong for gamers to resist even at the lowest end where Nvidia fails to stand out.

  • @Azureskies01

    @Azureskies01

    7 ай бұрын

    @@sammiller6631 Radeon didn't have to release FSR3 and could have put all that time and energy into making FSR2 a better DLSS. They didn't because they are chasing nvidia again. Radeon didn't have to come out with chiplets when they clearly weren't ready (idle power draw, multi monitor power draw, crashing in 10 year old games like in FFXIV-something i personally had happen for the first 5 months of owning my 7900XT). They did anyway. Radeon never misses their feet when they shoot for the moon.

  • @Rhynri
    @Rhynri7 ай бұрын

    I'd really love to see the 7960X benchmarked with these per-core numbers broken out like you did here, and an idle wattage for all of these chips. I run a gaming VM home server setup so energy efficiency is good to know.

  • @theopdiamond8349
    @theopdiamond83497 ай бұрын

    wow i have never been this early, i'm gonna predict the future and say great review steve! :)

  • @Artholos
    @Artholos7 ай бұрын

    Considering how the prices of the 3960x and 3970x have come down and how remarkably efficient they still are, getting yourself a used Threadripper has insane value proposition right now!

  • @guy_autordie
    @guy_autordie7 ай бұрын

    I do think that the 24 cores will be usefull for cities:skyline2 But yeah, the others games, the 7800x3D is enough or better.

  • @trucid2

    @trucid2

    7 ай бұрын

    Better. 7800X3D is king.

  • @spacebound1969

    @spacebound1969

    7 ай бұрын

    ​@@trucid2thread ripper is awesome but this chart just reinforces how amazing the 7800x3d is for simulation games. It's really it's own class.

  • @GamersNexus

    @GamersNexus

    7 ай бұрын

    Cities Skylines needs an RTX 7090!

  • @worried-woemwoem

    @worried-woemwoem

    7 ай бұрын

    Cities Skylines 2 seems to love higher core count CPUs, there was a post where they had a city with 600k pop with a 7950x3d with almost no slowdown in the simulation even at 3x speed

  • @tanthokg

    @tanthokg

    7 ай бұрын

    I thought that game was GPU-intensive and heavily single-threaded. Or so I heard

  • @Zosu22
    @Zosu227 ай бұрын

    Woah this is the first time I’ve seen a corrections section integrated into the KZread description

  • @thestrykernet
    @thestrykernet7 ай бұрын

    Greatly appreciate the overview of these and really hope there's some coverage of some of the less expensive models in the future along with some Intel. FWIW the Xeon w24xx and forthcoming w25xx (specifically the X SKUs) are the relative competition to the regular Threadripper though they cap out at 24 cores currently.

  • @evanscott6323
    @evanscott63237 ай бұрын

    It might be worthwhile to include Apple systems in benchmark showdowns of this type. Creative and high end workflows are one of the areas Apple targets with their chips, and seeing how they compare to threadripper in various tasks, especially Photoshop and Lightroom, would be really instructive in determining the real value proposition of their systems.

  • @Exoleres

    @Exoleres

    7 ай бұрын

    I'm not sure it matters that much since the takeaway from any Photoshop chart is always that Photoshop is a monster of bloated spaghetti code that always scales poorly.

  • @1BlinkwithAngels82
    @1BlinkwithAngels827 ай бұрын

    One thing I've been wondering is why the 7950X3D isn't on the blender efficiency charts, especially when it appears that it would be as efficient if not more than the 7800X3D. It pulls ~62% the power of the 7950X and is about 7% slower than it in Cinebench. Using the 7950X3D review video for efficiency scaling, it would sit at basically 17.6Wh which is insanely efficient for consumer parts.

  • @AK-Brian

    @AK-Brian

    7 ай бұрын

    I was going to ask about the same thing. It looks like it was omitted unintentionally, but would otherwise be the top scorer for efficiency in that test after the new Threadripper parts. I'd love to see where it officially ends up with that test metric.

  • @crispisauce
    @crispisauce7 ай бұрын

    Love the benchmarks. Would love some kind of ai/ml test

  • @Space_Reptile
    @Space_Reptile7 ай бұрын

    i do like the blessing marking(s?) on your whiteboard, truly a blessed chart if steve writes it on there

  • @DemonicPoker
    @DemonicPoker7 ай бұрын

    Another great and neutral informative review. I'm one of the people needing these beasts for daily computations, so I'm excited to learn everything before eventually ordering one. Would you have the possibility to make some Passmark tests with the 7980x and 7970 as these scale very well how my own workload will fare against other cpu's. Doing a lot of 'monte carlo' style based works, so if it's similar to the financial monte carlo you ran, it's super promising!

  • @GamersNexus

    @GamersNexus

    7 ай бұрын

    Can you give some more background on why/how Passmark represents your work? That'd help us in planning (and explaining it if we introduce it). Can you give an example of how your work relates to some kind of real world "output" or result? What does it mean for you if a CPU is faster? That'd help a ton. Thank you!

  • @DemonicPoker

    @DemonicPoker

    7 ай бұрын

    @@GamersNexus Myself and a lot of 'pokercolleagues' run a lot of computerized simulations, some kind of Monte Carlo algorithms to build our strategies. When we look at the internal benchmarks solves we run in our software, we see that they relate very much to the passmark scores in general. Off course there are some small exceptions (as always) - usually related to the number of cores/threads. ("Generalized" our simulation softwares run faster the more cores as a very simplified explanation but the scalability relates very much to what we see in passmark - besides a few exceptions)

  • @WhoAreYouQuestionmark
    @WhoAreYouQuestionmark7 ай бұрын

    How do you guys verify that ECC is indeed enabled and functions correctly on a software side?

  • @JohnCarter04
    @JohnCarter047 ай бұрын

    CPU review with a WHITEBOARD and a LN2 OC livestream in the same day??? Y'all are crazy. Love the content, to everyone over at Gamer's Nexus: thank you!

  • @shaneeslick
    @shaneeslick7 ай бұрын

    G'day Steve, I watched the Livestream first, not only was it lots of fun but also BIG THANKS to Amit & Bill for their time answering technical questions. Also as you mentioned it in the livestream it would be really cool if you did make the GN Logo Blender test available for us to use at home so then we can test our CPUs that are not on your list (like my Athlon 200GE) to see how terrible they are at rendering for a laugh😁.

  • @FARKENGFH
    @FARKENGFH7 ай бұрын

    Love the nil concern when 360 no look LN pour. 😂

  • @gabrielecarbone8235
    @gabrielecarbone82357 ай бұрын

    my god TSMC and AMD are really killing it

  • @572089
    @5720897 ай бұрын

    I'd love to see benchmarking on VMs running on the threadripper chips. i can image another use-case for them is running small Slimclient servers for small companies who don't wanna dish out 100k for an enterprise solution, but who still need decent processing power for say, 8 different stations simultaneously. with 64 cores you could be running 9 different "6 core" MVs natively off hardware with a whole 10 cores leftover for background tasks. not to mention all the PCIE lanes that could be running storage in RAID to making disk writing for the VMs redundant and instantaneous. that could be a gamechanger for small businesses.

  • @YuranFlow
    @YuranFlow7 ай бұрын

    I was not on notice that embargo was today, nice!

  • @kintustis
    @kintustis7 ай бұрын

    3.5w per core? I'd love to have a 56w 16-core on desktop without manually stepping down the (poorly documented) volt-frequency curve in bios

  • @Sunlight91

    @Sunlight91

    7 ай бұрын

    Just buy a 7950X and activate the 65W-ECO mode.

  • @Sgt_SealCluber
    @Sgt_SealCluber7 ай бұрын

    Hmm, I'm wondering how these would perform in games if you split them into groups of 8 cores with a video card. In say a really niche case of workstation by day, entire family gaming rig by night.

  • @bocahdongo7769

    @bocahdongo7769

    7 ай бұрын

    Absolutely could But depend of motherboard and setup anyway

  • @ojonathan
    @ojonathan7 ай бұрын

    Amazing tests, it's interesting to see how well those CPUs perform on code compilation, because despite being a highly “parallelizable” workload, at the end of the compilation pipeline, in which you have to assemble a single artifact (or a couple of individual artifacts), compilers and linkers are very reliant on the performance of individual cores. And those CPUs are clearly worse at single-core performance (not only because of power and thermal concerns, but scheduling gets harder), but they save so much time by going through the parallel bits extremely fast that, even if those CPUs take longer to go through the non-parallel bits, it's still faster and more efficient on the job than the lower core-count counterparts. It still like you said, you have to evaluate whether your workload takes advantage of it or not, and also be aware that there's a difference of highly multithreaded workload and highly “parallelizable” workload, the latter benefits way more from high core counts than the former, which commonly has more interdependency between the threads, so one thread stalling may negatively affect the others. Also I'm a little curious to whether those CCDs are as powerful as the customer lineup or not, how the gaming performance fare if you were up to have only one CCD enabled. Yes, it's crazy to buy this monster and proceed to disable all but one CCD, however the question is whether those cores can hold higher clocks for longer if they were not power and thermal constrained.

  • @iLegionaire3755
    @iLegionaire37557 ай бұрын

    Here’s hoping you get to review the 7995wx Threadripper PRO, after the overclocking sessions!

  • @sophiabachelard4208
    @sophiabachelard42087 ай бұрын

    The CPU needed to play City Skylines 2

  • @theangelofspace155
    @theangelofspace1557 ай бұрын

    Since a lot of people use apple for professional workload, it would be interesting to see M# performance in the charts, so people can judge if they can jump ship and not lose performance.

  • @yellowflash511

    @yellowflash511

    7 ай бұрын

    "a lot" is a stretch. Apple only dominates in work cases like media production and only in US. Windows dominates everything and everywhere else, mainly the old OSs like 7 and XP. I work in executive management of a BB investment bank and we still use windows 7 lmao

  • @nestanimations

    @nestanimations

    7 ай бұрын

    please define "a lot" and also "professional workload".

  • @paxdriver
    @paxdriver7 ай бұрын

    24:05 the financial and probability simulations are very important for machine learning - whether that's training or inference, depending on the model architecture. It's a very big deal for ML but even bigger for time series data analysis in market dynamics when you assess a large system of signals and indicators which compare to one another and are compared across several time scales in addition to many different products whose price action is being recorded. Log complexity on millisecond updates across dozens or hundreds of items needs a ton of processing if you don't want to miss out on an arbitrage or trade intraday algorithmically.

  • @Bluth53
    @Bluth537 ай бұрын

    Purposeful benchmarks! That's the way to go! Thank you and looking forward to see the same with consumer products. The best product for Emulation, Simulation, High Refresh Gaming or what have you - Keep it up GN ❤

  • @RadarLeon
    @RadarLeon7 ай бұрын

    how to club intel over the head in the most brute force way possible

  • @MrStillfree69
    @MrStillfree697 ай бұрын

    Oh yeah, gaming builds with 7980X incoming

  • @andyastrand

    @andyastrand

    7 ай бұрын

    For every gaming system made with this there's a scientist somewhere crying

  • @TheJjjoj

    @TheJjjoj

    7 ай бұрын

    ​@@andyastrandFor every scientist somewhere crying, there's a' me Mario!

  • @kennethmadsen6474
    @kennethmadsen64747 ай бұрын

    I love Threadripper CPU's. So glad they are coming back. I bought a first gen Threadripper, and it's still running in my home server.

  • @JoePolaris
    @JoePolaris7 ай бұрын

    Steve and team, kudos on the reporting ! Out of curiosity, based on usage type of TR 7980x , would you guys venture into a match with Sapphire Rapids for instance, the TR will be a rockstar for storage platforms and Virtual Machines usage!?

  • @zpd8003
    @zpd80037 ай бұрын

    Please, GN, compile and post your complete benchmark charts on your new website! Every review shows partial charts that include only a (random) selection of models that you've reviewed, which makes sense for presentation purposes but users want to have a complete reference SOMEWHERE that they can use for their own comparisons. This is especially important for PC cases and CPU coolers, where some very old models still outperform many new ones. At times I've had to open several different old reviews to look at partial charts in order to get a sense of how one model compares to another, and it can be frustrating. 🥺

  • @pachete.

    @pachete.

    7 ай бұрын

    They will in a weeks time, they said in their video about webiste

  • @zpd8003

    @zpd8003

    7 ай бұрын

    @@pachete. Are you sure? I know they'll post their old reviews, but that's not what i'm talking about. I've never heard them say they'll be posting complete charts, but maybe I've missed something.

  • @pachete.

    @pachete.

    7 ай бұрын

    @@zpd8003 kzread.info/dash/bejne/f6aY2ZOfmdS2naw.html

  • @blackbird42
    @blackbird427 ай бұрын

    I must say, it is nice to see those units tested with more "industrial" software, like FEM etc. The regular test suite just does not show what are these CPUs capable of in my opinion.

  • @mandalorian43
    @mandalorian437 ай бұрын

    Definitely here to see some crazy numbers.

  • @RHODEZ
    @RHODEZ7 ай бұрын

    The Level one Jab is the best part of the video, we all love you Wendell

  • @garrettkajmowicz
    @garrettkajmowicz7 ай бұрын

    Don't forget the additional benefit of the increased I/O. Would some of these GPU tests be able to run with multiple GPUs installed in the system?

  • @roanwestraat9604

    @roanwestraat9604

    7 ай бұрын

    There is no way to leverage more than 1 GPU for gaming besides the odd accelerator here and there. Its a dead concept. Now if you are looking to run some parallel workstation workloads over multiple GPUs, now we are talking options.

  • @bocahdongo7769

    @bocahdongo7769

    7 ай бұрын

    Those app that utilize full GPU computing actually don't really care about PCIE speed since it doesn't need to communicate that much with CPU during process, and subsequently CPU load Because of that, the performance is just scale of those GPU performance anyway.

  • @Phaevryn
    @Phaevryn7 ай бұрын

    But can they play Crisis?

  • @GamersNexus

    @GamersNexus

    7 ай бұрын

    Haha, just wait until they have enough cache to fit Crysis in cache.

  • @hueanao

    @hueanao

    7 ай бұрын

    ​@@GamersNexusnow that you said it, I wonder if a X3D Threadripper would make sense. Iirc, in Ryzen, the X3D is only useful for gaming.

  • @dog_knight
    @dog_knight7 ай бұрын

    Really good review as always. One thing I would have liked to see is the 10980xe included in more benchmarks (or the W-3175X). The potential customers for these CPU's are likely moving from previous gen HEDT platforms. Ideally, a comparison to the Xeon W CPU's, but I can understand the financial aspect of obtaining these CPU's if they aren't loaned or provided to you given they would have minimal ongoing benefit to the majority of your audience. Obviously the x299 part would be much slower, but as with anything it comes down to whether the price is worth the increase. Definitely would have been more useful than the i5 12400 and R5 3600 that was in most of the charts. I do understand you probably just included them as you had recent test figures however.

  • @McTroyd
    @McTroyd7 ай бұрын

    Appreciated the HPC (high-performance compute*) benchmarks being added to the mix for the high-core CPUs. I, too, have no idea what most of them mean in real-world terms, but it's cool to see some of the numbers these CPUs might actually be crunching. If you come across someone that _does_ know about these things, is doing something cool, and wants to show off the compute, I wouldn't object to seeing that. HPC is cool. (*-defined because too many things use the letters HP)

  • @Qyngali
    @Qyngali7 ай бұрын

    Small point: The TR parts don't have more cache than the regular 7000 series, the total cache doesn't matter. What matters is cache per core, and that is identical except for the X3D parts. If they decide to release X3D TR... yeah lol. But those won't have more cache than the 7800 X3D per core either.

  • @5467nick

    @5467nick

    7 ай бұрын

    You are correct. I wonder if the reduced cores per CCD models (or if disabling cores in each CCD manually) would make a difference. The 24 core part has the same L3 as the 32 core part, granted that's still far from the cache per core of the X3D CPUs. I doubt AMD will sell X3D threadrippers since productivity workloads don't tend to benefit from it. Then again, AMD does sell a few EPYCs with the extra cache, so who knows? Maybe someone will at least try to get one of those EPYCs into a board that allows overclocking. Some people did it with the older EPYCs.

  • @TigonIII

    @TigonIII

    7 ай бұрын

    @@5467nick I just saw der8auer's video before this one and he tries out some CCD and core configurations. Definitely worth a watch.

  • @doniscoming
    @doniscoming7 ай бұрын

    I think it would be cool to compare that to M3 Ultra or whatever the best apple silicon thing is right now - kinda like best of what prosumers can expect on both ends :)

  • @TheRadioactiveBanana32
    @TheRadioactiveBanana327 ай бұрын

    Waking up from a nap and watching threadripper review, pretty good day today

  • @mikezappulla4092

    @mikezappulla4092

    7 ай бұрын

    What time zone are you in?

  • @owenpatterson9355
    @owenpatterson93557 ай бұрын

    This is a super impressive review, and it was really interesting to see all the SPECworkstation results for simulations! My 2950x might finally have a worthy successor

  • @AndersHass
    @AndersHass7 ай бұрын

    Who would have thought the most popular part of a GAMERS Nexus videos would be GAMING, lol

  • @IndellableHatesHandles
    @IndellableHatesHandles7 ай бұрын

    A Ryzen 7 1700x is worth about $50, while a similarly-aged Threadripper costs about $30 more _and_ requires a special motherboard. In conclusion, you might expect that a Threadripper part would be good for gaming after a few years, but given the actual cost to get one, you'll always be better off with a newer Ryzen 5 or i5.

  • @GamersNexus

    @GamersNexus

    7 ай бұрын

    Well, not always. For mainstream use, definitely. But there are professional use cases where current-gen R5/i5 parts just won't do what you need in heavy enough workloads.

  • @bocahdongo7769

    @bocahdongo7769

    7 ай бұрын

    For some people, nah Those PCIE is really real estate, you can load fuk ton of PCIE device without worrying about which one goes which and gets disable or whatever

  • @bocahdongo7769

    @bocahdongo7769

    7 ай бұрын

    ​@@GamersNexusdo wish those PCIE gen 5 motherboard can do super-split PCIE that turn into lower PCIE version but double the lane. Like, you got cheap HEDT there

  • @IndellableHatesHandles

    @IndellableHatesHandles

    7 ай бұрын

    @@GamersNexus That clarification is important. I meant for gaming, of course, and made that comparison because only older Threadrippers would have a similar platform cost to an i5 or Ryzen 5. I guess I didn't make that entirely clear.

  • @guiguipau

    @guiguipau

    7 ай бұрын

    @@GamersNexus Yes but : you need more compute power? Buy anything - including EPYC or XEON - for pro use that matches your compute need and fits your price range, and get a mainstream CPU - Ryzen, i5, whatever - for everyday purpose. It will be both cheaper and a better experience. HEDT is dead, and while these TR 7000 and 7000 PRO themselves are good, the cost AND lack of versatility of the platform, mostly through the absurdity that TRX50 and WRX90 are compared to any decent EPYC 9004 mobo for instance, render the platform a basic scam. I consider HEDT dead for now, and if it weren't for the scam that DDR5 currenly is (come on, it's been 2 years and we don't even have 64 GB mainstream udimms) and if we at least had these dimms, where you could enable 256 or 512 GB standard DDR5 in 4 slots, this would not even be a discussion : you need real professional feats like tons of PCIE lanes, compute power and at least 1 TB ram : get a server CPU and board. You're a prosumer doing rendering, huge labs and prototypes? Get a Ryzen 9 or an i7 / i9 and 256 / 512 GB DDR5. Let's be real : with CPUs normally progressing in terms of compute power, by the time Zen 5 / Arrow Lake or Zen 6 / Nova Lake are out, if 64 / 128 GB DDR5 udimms are out, this pseudo HEDT is probably dead. People who need more of everything will go to server chips. People who only need more ram will stick to mainstream.

  • @nomisastro2000
    @nomisastro20007 ай бұрын

    Thanks Steve!

  • @christhornton9762
    @christhornton97627 ай бұрын

    Looking forward to your best of 2024 !

  • @nestanimations
    @nestanimations7 ай бұрын

    Please can you guys figure out a viewport test for these CPU's for blender. No one in their right mind spends this type of money on a CPU and doesn't have a 4090 to render on. People who use Blender want to know VIEWPORT performance: Can the CPU playback an animation in solid mode at the required fps. How are fluid bake times? How are other physics bake times, etc. I really appreciated your reviews but render times are useless.

  • @ChrisGR93_TxS
    @ChrisGR93_TxS7 ай бұрын

    lets see how long this one is gonna stay supported

  • @teamplays2252

    @teamplays2252

    7 ай бұрын

    As compared to what exactly, Intel's power-hungry heaters performing half or less? Warranty is all the support I need, gimme performance 🤩

  • @andersjjensen

    @andersjjensen

    7 ай бұрын

    AMD has made no claims about socket support. Expect to retire the motherboard when you need something faster. If you don't like that then you're SOL as Intel's upcoming Fishhawk Falls Refresh will also be EOL after this "generation" (it's basically "14th gen Xeon W").

  • @Jodlauspc
    @Jodlauspc7 ай бұрын

    B-S, binomial and Monte Carlo are three of the most basic derivative (options) and forecasting models: they are very useful, and depending on the dataset Monte Carlo simulations could take a while. At university some teachers did not have enough horsepower to run them real time with lots of references and multiple (6+) graphs updating simultaneously. Running Excel with 30+ Binomial decision trees, while calculating the resulting Black-Scholes pricing for each step, and having their Greeks update live needs some CPU power to do it.

  • @endreh8406
    @endreh84067 ай бұрын

    Lmao the call out at 3:20 excellent. Well done guys

  • @bl3320
    @bl33207 ай бұрын

    first

  • @juhopeltonen1531

    @juhopeltonen1531

    7 ай бұрын

    Second

  • @kakomagic

    @kakomagic

    7 ай бұрын

    THIRD @@juhopeltonen1531

  • @mikezappulla4092

    @mikezappulla4092

    7 ай бұрын

    Hey, who cares.

  • @AlfaPro1337
    @AlfaPro13377 ай бұрын

    Shame that AMD decided to charge an exorbitant for a HEDT. I thought Intel's HEDT US$1800 9980XE was bad, but, this takes the crown. Thanks Evil Su!

  • @POVwithRC

    @POVwithRC

    7 ай бұрын

    "AMD should be a charity because reasons"

  • @icedreamer9629

    @icedreamer9629

    7 ай бұрын

    Given performance and inflation, these prices are entirely fair.

  • @bocahdongo7769

    @bocahdongo7769

    7 ай бұрын

    Blud get insanely surprise of professional PC part "tax". Now you know why Nvidia really hesitant to add VRAM on Geforce while it has same performance with Quadro (even on work app). Now you know where the REAL cash cow is

  • @bocahdongo7769

    @bocahdongo7769

    7 ай бұрын

    But you know what, Blud. At least you get CPU contact frame officially provided on motherboard, unlike Intel core series that you need to bought it separately and may risk losing your warranty.

  • @sirmonkey1985

    @sirmonkey1985

    7 ай бұрын

    if you take inflation into consideration the 7960x is only ~100 dollars more than 3970x launch vs launch price for between 25-50% improvement in performance depending on the use case. the 7980X price makes sense considering it's literally double the cores for twice the price and will likely compete against epyc and threadripper pro sales for smaller businesses.

  • @MicahGoldstein
    @MicahGoldstein7 ай бұрын

    I'm on a second gen TR (2950) and I'd love to see something from its gen on the charts for comparison. Also it would have been nice to see what PBO enabled looked like. Seems like it's an easy switch to flip if your cooling is in order.

  • @vibonacci
    @vibonacci7 ай бұрын

    Please keep these Threadripper reviews in. Can't wait for 7995WX review and to see what benefits those higher grade chips actually provide and what influence memory channels have. At $11,000, that's a steal.

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