If I didn't have a clearance problem, I would have one in my cart right now.Some air (Noctua) vs AIO (Kraken) comparison:
Noctua clearly wins, specially keeping in mind fans rpm![]()
yeah, it seems clear that Noctua solution (specially U14 but even the U12) is a great option for TR, and just better than any Asetek "reused" AIO.If I didn't have a clearance problem, I would have one in my cart right now.
That doesn't seem to line up with PCper's testing with Intel VROC on X299 where IOPS remained constant.nvme raid results are very disappointing. It's a gimmick unless you NEED 4+ GB/S sustained. iOPS are much lower. In other words you're trading off random io (what you want a SSD for in the first place!) for sequential...
There is no real configuration to adjust as well so no idea of stripe size, etc.
If you have the RAM, it's far better to use a caching software along with non raid nvme drives to have the best of both worlds.
That doesn't seem to line up with PCper's testing with Intel VROC on X299 where IOPS remained constant.
Random IOPS read or write? I rechecked the PCper article, they tested only 4K random reads. Too much focus on Optane means they simply didn't include any write results.This is not an Intel system.
nvme raid results are very disappointing. It's a gimmick unless you NEED 4+ GB/S sustained. iOPS are much lower. In other words you're trading off random io (what you want a SSD for in the first place!) for sequential...
There is no real configuration to adjust as well so no idea of stripe size, etc.
If you have the RAM, it's far better to use a caching software along with non raid nvme drives to have the best of both worlds.
nvme raid results are very disappointing. It's a gimmick unless you NEED 4+ GB/S sustained. iOPS are much lower. In other words you're trading off random io (what you want a SSD for in the first place!) for sequential...
nvme raid results are very disappointing. It's a gimmick unless you NEED 4+ GB/S sustained. iOPS are much lower. In other words you're trading off random io (what you want a SSD for in the first place!) for sequential...
"very disappointing" seems a bit strong though. This is a high performance workstation platform though, so I would expect the bandwidth to be pretty nice to have working on 8k footage for example. I think you'll be saturating an x4 connection below 8k, so some sort of raid is required.
Random IOPS read or write? I rechecked the PCper article, they tested only 4K random reads. Too much focus on Optane means they simply didn't include any write results.
wow some storage thereGot the parts in and got everything setup, with previous unRAID goodies transferred.
First thing I've noticed is this platform (or at least this board) is picky about what PCIe cards it will boot with, I have a Fresco Logic USB 3 card and Intel PRO/1000 VT intended for pass through that will hang the board at POST on latest BIOS. I have an Intel PRO/1000 PT I'm passing through instead for the moment, for now I'm experimenting with pfSense without messing with my dedicated box.
AMD has a survey up dealing with boot and pass through issues, I've already filled in and submitted for my configuration.
GPU pass through is also pretty broken; I already knew this though since it has been an issue since Ryzen was first released. In fact pass through on AMD was an issue even with the AM3+ and FX8350 system this replaced.
Overall the above aren't deal breakers for me and I am very satisfied with the machine, it is very nice to see AMD competitive again. Word of advice to anyone eyeing the Cosmos II however, it is huge and HEAVY; it's not a negative for me though.
Specs:
Threadrippper 1950X
Asrock x399 Taichi
128GB G.Skill Fortis 2400
AMD 6670 for host (GT 1030 on the way)
LSI Dual SAS with IT firmware
MSI Geforce 1060 6GB (unused for now)
Intel PRO/1000 PT quad port
EVGA Supernova 1000 T2 Power Supply
5x WD Red 4TB (2 are parity)
3x WD Green 4TB
3x Segate 4TB
2x Intel 180GB SSDs
2x Kingston 250GB SSDs (in BTRFS RAID 0 with Intel SSDs)
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Nice build. That case definitely deserves some watercooling love though. Huge is also relative, as my case easily dwarfs thatGot the parts in and got everything setup, with previous unRAID goodies transferred.
First thing I've noticed is this platform (or at least this board) is picky about what PCIe cards it will boot with, I have a Fresco Logic USB 3 card and Intel PRO/1000 VT intended for pass through that will hang the board at POST on latest BIOS. I have an Intel PRO/1000 PT I'm passing through instead for the moment, for now I'm experimenting with pfSense without messing with my dedicated box.
AMD has a survey up dealing with boot and pass through issues, I've already filled in and submitted for my configuration.
GPU pass through is also pretty broken; I already knew this though since it has been an issue since Ryzen was first released. In fact pass through on AMD was an issue even with the AM3+ and FX8350 system this replaced.
Overall the above aren't deal breakers for me and I am very satisfied with the machine, it is very nice to see AMD competitive again. Word of advice to anyone eyeing the Cosmos II however, it is huge and HEAVY; it's not a negative for me though.
Specs:
Threadrippper 1950X
Asrock x399 Taichi
128GB G.Skill Fortis 2400
AMD 6670 for host (GT 1030 on the way)
LSI Dual SAS with IT firmware
MSI Geforce 1060 6GB (unused for now)
Intel PRO/1000 PT quad port
EVGA Supernova 1000 T2 Power Supply
5x WD Red 4TB (2 are parity)
3x WD Green 4TB
3x Segate 4TB
2x Intel 180GB SSDs
2x Kingston 250GB SSDs (in BTRFS RAID 0 with Intel SSDs)
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The high loss of iops is bad as I've said in the past going with dedicated iOP hardware iOPs remained unchanged whereas STR scales nicely with additional drives. It could be an immature driver.
8k video isn't close to stressing a single 960 unless you're talking about uncompressed stuff. In that case most professionals aren't using gaming motherboards! LOL
Some have more than one video on the timeline when editing though.
But anyway, are these really gaming motherboards? What is a "gaming motherboard" and how is it different from a workstation motherboard? Why would a gamer buy a Threadripper?
Everything I've read yells "productivity" when I look at Threadripper, especially nvme raid and 60 PCIe lanes.