DrMrLordX
Lifer
- Apr 27, 2000
- 22,550
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My new EK Supreme EVO cpu cooler has an AMD bracket that supports AM4 sockets.
Huh. How recently did you get that?
My new EK Supreme EVO cpu cooler has an AMD bracket that supports AM4 sockets.
I had a board that did 425 HTT at the time. (ASUS A8N32-SLI) It was undoubtedly a fun time.Why not? You can't just expect multipliers to do all the work for you, all the time. bclk OC gives the overclocker lots of flexibility, and it lets them go past the listed memory ratios on the motherboard.
s754, s939, AM2, AM2+, AM3, and AM3+ all had flexible and stable bclk/htt OC. It was beautiful. You could overclock anything from a lowly Sempr0n to a big-boy FX on pretty much any motherboard that could handle it. You just had to feel out the mobo's bclk limits.
Some companies send AMD AM4 brackets for free, I posted different days ago my AMD AM4 brackets for Be Quiet! shadow/dark rock series.Huh. How recently did you get that?
Huh. How recently did you get that?
Interesting. I have had less luck convincing Noctua to ship an AM4 mount kit for their heatsinks prior to the Ryzen launch (A320 boards have been available for months, but apparently Noctua is not fased by this fact). Mildly annoying, but hardly crippling.
According to Chiphell user Wjm47196:
- Launch in March
- 4C/8T four months after 8C/16T
- (Fastest?) 8C/16T might not be cheap - he expects 3999-4999 RMB ($580-720)
https://www.chiphell.com/thread-1697525-1-1.html
So he expects better 8c/16t Zen bins to be priced against better bins of 6c/12t BDW-E. Now all we need is a leak about the $400-440 price for lower bins of Zen 8c/16t(Fastest?) 8C/16T might not be cheap - he expects 3999-4999 RMB ($580-720)
- (Fastest?) 8C/16T might not be cheap - he expects 3999-4999 RMB ($580-720)
But 4C chips in April, ouch. That's looooong wait.
- he expects 3999-4999 RMB ($580-720)
You mean July?
It's a bit of a wait, but AMD aren't big enough right now to do too much at once and do them all well.
You mean July?
It's a bit of a wait, but AMD aren't big enough right now to do too much at once and do them all well.
I think it is a business strategy and has more to do with a premium they are going to ask for 6 and 8 core Zen.
It's no biggie but that means my friend and my 32GB DDR4-3200 has to sit unopened in a box at least until April. We bought them ahead of time since I expected demand exploding during Zen's launch and manufacturers cutting supply in 2017.
I actually read that as good news. I interpret that as AMD being pretty bullish on performance vis-à-vis the best Intel can produce.
I think it is a business strategy and has more to do with a premium they are going to ask for 6 and 8 core Zen. Releasing 4c/8t along side would steer all but professionals from the expensive 8c/16t part. The difference in gaming performance between 4c/8t and 8c/16t will be minor and totally not worth it.
By releasing only high-end 8c/16t parts initially, amd hopes to grab a small portion of gaming market without throwing profits out of the window.
After the release of 4c/8t Zen, they will slash the prices of high-end parts so that some portion of gaming market may find it worth going with 6 or 8 core CPU.
Yeah, the whole sales plan will pretty much have to be that quad cores are not enough and you need an 8c/16t cpu today.Why not buy the 8c 16t cpu? I have had a quad for the last 10 years.