Ratman6161
Senior member
- Mar 21, 2008
- 616
- 75
- 91
The original questions was (to paraphrase) "In what scenarios is an AMD CPU a better value"? Most of the discussion seems to be about either gaming or home theater use and seems to be looking at the lower end of the lines. So I'll throw out an alternative where I'm using AMD that seems to work very well. BTW, I use an i7-2600K @ 4.4 Ghz as my main system.
My "other" system:
AMD FX 8320 @ 4.0 GHZ (will do a lot more but when you see my usage this will make sense.
Asrock 990FX Extreme 3 motherboard
32 GB DDR3 1600
LSI 9260-4i PCIe Raid Controller (this is the reason for the 990Fx extreme 3 with lots of PCIe lanes available)
4 Seagate 500 GB SATA3 drives in RAID 5 on the LSI controller
1 160 GB notebook drive as the "OS" drive
1 2TB WD Green drive
Cheap PCIe fanless graphics card
Intel Gigabit NIC
What is this rig good for? Well, with a free version of VMWare ESXi, it makes an absolutely wonderful home lab machine. I can simulate an entire Windows network on there with domain controllers, DB Server, web server, file server and a couple of workstations all running at the same time. Handles it all beautifully.
Of course for this usage, all those servers and workstation virtual machines are not doing much individually or at least not a lot going on at the same time and single thread performance is not that relevant. But giving VMWare a large number of Physical cores and a large amount of RAM makes this all run very smoothly and gets the job done.
Of course I could just as easily have done this with an i7 CPU with 4 physical and 8 virtual cores which would have gotten the job done nicely too. It just so happens that I live near a Microcenter and they had an FX8320 + mother board bundle deal that was too good to pass up. Still have them though with a different MB for $238 for the bundle if you want 990FX or $190 if you can live with 970. Thats for both mb and CPU. Hard to beat when what you want is lots of cores but individual core performance is not that important. All other components would have been the same weather I built on Intel or AMD.
So that, in a nutshell is a scenario where an AMD CPU makes sense.
My "other" system:
AMD FX 8320 @ 4.0 GHZ (will do a lot more but when you see my usage this will make sense.
Asrock 990FX Extreme 3 motherboard
32 GB DDR3 1600
LSI 9260-4i PCIe Raid Controller (this is the reason for the 990Fx extreme 3 with lots of PCIe lanes available)
4 Seagate 500 GB SATA3 drives in RAID 5 on the LSI controller
1 160 GB notebook drive as the "OS" drive
1 2TB WD Green drive
Cheap PCIe fanless graphics card
Intel Gigabit NIC
What is this rig good for? Well, with a free version of VMWare ESXi, it makes an absolutely wonderful home lab machine. I can simulate an entire Windows network on there with domain controllers, DB Server, web server, file server and a couple of workstations all running at the same time. Handles it all beautifully.
Of course for this usage, all those servers and workstation virtual machines are not doing much individually or at least not a lot going on at the same time and single thread performance is not that relevant. But giving VMWare a large number of Physical cores and a large amount of RAM makes this all run very smoothly and gets the job done.
Of course I could just as easily have done this with an i7 CPU with 4 physical and 8 virtual cores which would have gotten the job done nicely too. It just so happens that I live near a Microcenter and they had an FX8320 + mother board bundle deal that was too good to pass up. Still have them though with a different MB for $238 for the bundle if you want 990FX or $190 if you can live with 970. Thats for both mb and CPU. Hard to beat when what you want is lots of cores but individual core performance is not that important. All other components would have been the same weather I built on Intel or AMD.
So that, in a nutshell is a scenario where an AMD CPU makes sense.
