DrMrLordX
Lifer
- Apr 27, 2000
- 23,112
- 13,215
- 136
Yes, we are saving a lot of money running a few FX chips in the mix -- Although, for 24/7 running on World Community Grid.... Most of us are going in the other direction -- Undervolting and Underclocking. My undervolted FX 8320 is only pulling 27 more watts than my 3770K. So far, I haven't been able to get my i7 stable when undervolted -- although I suspect that has more to do with the cheap motherboard. But unlocked chips from either company really open up a ton of options. If you're running a variant of Ubuntu -- an FX performs much like an equivalent Ivy. Where Windows 7 appears to throttle an FX down to Nehalem levels. The bang for the buck of an FX is insanely good if you plan on being a Linux user.
See, I can understand wanting to use an FX if you know you are going to be loading all modules 24/7, in an environment when the compilers aren't working against you, and in a situation where reducing power draw lets you run another machine to produce more outpoints (in this case, WCG points). That's why I specifically mentioned your case. What you are doing with the FX makes sense, and there are probably ~$60 motherboards out there with 4+1 phase power setups that would be just fine for undervolting. Now THAT is a value proposition, especially after the price cuts come Sept. 1st. You could get by with poor cooling on a cheap motherboard, significantly improving the upfront cost of acquisition.
My main problem is that some of my workloads use two cores or less, for which anything over a quad is overkill. There are some occasions on which I could use the full octal core power of an 8xxx/9xxx FX, yes, but that does not represent every use-case. Furthermore, I can run my tricore not-exactly-Deneb that cost me $30 off of eBay at 3.9 ghz with a nice NB overclock. According to what I've seen from Piledriver vs Stars comparisons, I'd have to push Piledriver to around 4.4 ghz or higher to get consistently better IPC than what I can get from my Stars chip. Sure, I'd have much greater ability to handle multiple threads, but I'd be sad if I made a significant investment in new hardware only to barely beat my Stars chip on some everyday workloads.
I use this board. It is a bit cheaper than the Sabertooth and a good chunk cheaper than the Crosshair. I've never used either of the Asus boards, so I can't say anything confidently, but I wouldn't be surprised if the ASRock was every bit as good. I am benchmark stable above 5.3GHz with enough voltage to pull almost 400 watts on the CPU alone. But, I generally don't run it that way, I'm having more fun undervolting these days.
I have seen mixed reviews of the Extreme9. Some claim it is the top-performing 990FX board out there today, while others say that it is an inferior overclocker compared to the Sabertooth. The cheapest Sabertooth I can find is $170 shipped, so the price advantage of the Extreme9 is somewhat moot. Based on your feedback, I would be tempted to get the Extreme9 at that price point, but I know I wouldn't be saving any money getting it.
There is no argument that the FX CPU's use more power than their Intel counterparts. But, I think this is something that is blown out of proportion for the average user. For server farms and people who will have their CPU loaded often for extended periods of time, I get it, that makes sense. For someone who games even for hours at a time, it just doesn't really matter. (That is if you live where electricity is reasonable.)
I agree when it comes to utility costs, somewhat. The up-front costs associated with running these FX CPUs comes from delivering power and cooling them. Demanding users who want the most from their CPU, bar none, are really going to have to put something like an nh-d15 or some kind of water cooling on these things. What do you use to keep up your 5.3 ghz overclock?
Also, if you live in a cooler climate, that extra heat isn't wasted. I live in WI, any extra wattage that passes off my radiator enters the environment in my home. For ~7-8 months a year for me, that means I'm paying whatever the electricity cost would be for that heat. I don't know how it would compare in efficiency or costs to my natural gas furnace doing it's job in my home. But the point is, if you heat your home that extra heat energy isn't wasted cost. No one takes this into account when they compare costs. How much in electric did I pay for from my CPU use that is keeping my furnace off longer for the majority of the year? How much does that in turn save me in natural gas costs?
I have been using CPUs as heating units since my 1.4 ghz Tbird. That works great in the winter, but in TN, it is pure pain in the summer.
I kind of wish they would shrink them. If they could chop the power use down and keep performance as is they could probably sell a few Opterons. .
As do I, though the time for that has past. The die is cast.
First off all there are more than a single reason to get the FX CPUs, and certainly OC to FX9590 levels is not the only one.
While this is true (the WCG situation MiddleOfTheRoad mentions is one example), consider where people might be coming from when buying a chip like an 8320SE or 8370SE: you're got a lot of AMD fans still sitting on 3.8-4 ghz Deneb chips, Thuban chips, and the like. In my case, I have an x2 with pretensions of being an x3 that can push 3 cores at 3.9 ghz. Is a 4.4 ghz FX going to beat that x2 in every use case? I have some situations, such as compiling Java in Eclipse, where only one core is consistently utilized. I would like some more cores AND some more IPC for running emulators/VMs. I am not confident that the FX is going to give me both until I start pushing 9590-like speeds.
I have run the x2 as an x2 before, and I know that if I could get a significant boost in IPC, that it would help me in most if not all my use cases, even if I didn't get any more cores. So there's this little thing called a G3258 out there serving as a big reason why a discounted FX might not be in the cards. There's an upcoming $100 CPU/board combo for the G3258 which supposedly will be 4.7 ghz capable with an aftermarket cooler (and I just happen to have one available) that would absolutely annihilate my faux Deneb in everything. Why am I spending ~$220 or more for an FX that will be better some of the time, when I can get the G3258 that will be better all of the time?
(sure, the FX will be even better still in heavily-threaded cases, but cmon . . . we're talking budget OC here!)
The Vishera sweet spot is 4.4GHz with Turbo off. At that frequency you get very acceptable single thread performance and really really good MT performance at almost the same power usage as an FX-8350 at default.
Acceptable on what basis? Is it going to beat a 3.9 ghz Stars chip's IPC?
Turbo uses way too much Voltage elevating power usage of the entire platform. Overclock an FX8320 to 4.2GHz (Default Heat-sink) with Turbo off and lower voltage than 1.425V that is the default and you get a much faster CPU at lower power consumption than FX8350 at default. Reviews havent shown that because they only run the CPU at default settings.
. . . and that would be wonderful if I spent all my time using all of those cores.
The high price motherboard for OC is a myth, my FX8350 was working at 4.7GHz stable with my ASUS M5A97 R2.0. There was no Throttling at all.
I looked at that board. If you hit 4.7 ghz with no throttling, then you are quite fortunate. Cheaping out on VRMs just seems like a bad, bad idea when it comes to AM3+.
Use the default Heat-sink and OC to 4.2GHz Turbo off, for $249 you have a very nice system with acceptable ST and very nice MT performance, 6x sata-III and USB-3.
Add in a nice GPU like R9 280 or Tonga and you can play every available game today and even next releases too for at least 2-3 years.
For a budget system and for users that want/need that CPU performance it is still good to go. Now with even lower prices they will become even better.
At $250 for board + CPU, we're starting to get outside of budget territory. An FX at 4.2 ghz would be even less likely to clearly beat by "Deneb" chip in IPC. I would much rather try out an overclocked A8-7600 on the Asus A88x Plus (or maybe something even cheaper, if I'm feeling lucky). Sure, it's only two modules, but at least I wouldn't have to spend anything on a dGPU.
Or for even less money, there's the G3258.
