Now Ryzen 7900X is cheaper than 7900 what is weird. Is it possible to run 7900X undervolted to reach the low power consumption of Ryzen 7900? If yes, is it better to buy this cheaper 7900X or 7900 which has 65W TDP?

  • @n3m37h
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    9 months ago

    Yes get the x variant, its easy to limit, if you dont need the extra cores get the 7800x3d

    • @HansSlonzokOP
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      29 months ago

      i need my pc for photo editing, so i think 7900 or 7900x should be better than 3xd.

      • @Heavybell
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        29 months ago

        Anything that benefits from extra L3 cache will benefit from the x3D. I dunno if photo editing is one such tho, probably not.

    • @HansSlonzokOP
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      19 months ago

      do i need the mainboard with the “highest” chipset or the with the cheaper chipset it will be possible too?

      • @fuckwit_mcbumcrumble
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        29 months ago

        In theory the A series chipset will run a 7950x3d or whatever the highest end CPU is. It’s the power delivery of the board that matters more. Since you plan on underclocking it then in literally any board should work just fine with it.

        I wouldn’t cheap out that much on a board. Get a reasonable B series board, not some A series or bottom of the barrel B series if you’re pairing it with such a high end CPU.

  • @Chev
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    29 months ago

    Why any of those instead of the 7800x3d?

    • @HansSlonzokOP
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      19 months ago

      why should i take this 78003xd? it takes more power and is slower tgan 7900x.

      • @NIB
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        9 months ago

        It’s better for games, better performance. The cache makes a big difference. And has better cache/core distribution than the 7950x3d and 7900x3d, so it has consistently better performance for games.

        The 7900 is only better for tasks that can take advantage of the extra cores, which are basically 0 for normal users.

  • Mike
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    29 months ago

    You cna use eco mode in UEFI BIOS to limit the power draw. It’s easier and morenreliable than the software (ryzen master) method.