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I7 [email protected] vs I7 [email protected] with Asus GTX 780 Strix OC

Featured Replies

  • Commercial Member

Hi,

 

I am about to invest in some new hardware for my homecockpit running P3Dv3 and PMDG B737NGX.

 

My question :

 

Can I expect any improvements in FPS, smoothness, loading times of textures when going to an I7 [email protected] from an i7 [email protected] including the motherboard and memory changes.

 

I will also update my motherboard to an Asus Z170 Pro Gaming with 16gb DDR4@3000 from an Asus P8P67 Pro with 8 gb DDR3@1600.

My Asus GTX 780 Strix OC will still be used after the change to i7 6700K.

 

 

Smoothness and loading times are the most important issues.

 

I have monitors running 1920x1080.

 

 

 

I am very happy with the I7 2600K solution I have today, but it almost 5 years old now.

Roar Kristensen    www.flightsim4fun.com

P3Dv4 with Opencockpits hardware controlled by OC4BAv4 for immersive PMDG B737/777/747 flying

XPLANE 11 with Opencockpits hardware controlled by OC4BA_XP for immersive  B737 flying

rmMShli.jpg?1 WylQl0J.jpg?3

Hi,

 

I am about to invest in some new hardware for my homecockpit running P3Dv3 and PMDG B737NGX.

 

My question :

 

Can I expect any improvements in FPS, smoothness, loading times of textures when going to an I7 [email protected] from an i7 [email protected] including the motherboard and memory changes.

 

I will also update my motherboard to an Asus Z170 Pro Gaming with 16gb DDR4@3000 from an Asus P8P67 Pro with 8 gb DDR3@1600.

My Asus GTX 780 Strix OC will still be used after the change to i7 6700K.

 

 

Smoothness and loading times are the most important issues.

 

I have monitors running 1920x1080.

 

 

 

I am very happy with the I7 2600K solution I have today, but it almost 5 years old now.

 

For simming I think you are better of going with a I7 4790K, but I don't know about an I7 6700

I did exactly the same step last weekend and my impression is that it has improved the simming experience quite a bit. I am, however, most of the time on X-Plane 10.50 but also did a test flight with P3D and was impressed how the "new" system handles that.

 

Please keep in mind that you need the 6700k if you want to OC the CPU. Mine is still running not over clocked but with a turbo speed of 4.2 Ghz.

 

For me the new experience is well worth the costs and efforts.

IXEG 737 Beta-Tester and First Officer

i7 [email protected], 32GB RAM, Palit GTX 1080 GameRock Premium@2Ghz, Oculus Rift S, ButtKicker
X-Plane 11 latedt version on a Samsung M.2 SSD for speedy loading times

*Should mention I'm running FSX:SE, not P3D*

 

I went from a 4.5ghz 2500k to a 4.6ghz 6600k. Very noticeable improvement in the amount of headroom now available. I lock fps to 30, but I used to see dips down to 25 at times with the most intensive addons. It has never budged more than .5 of a frame on my new system, and I'm also able to turn up autogen and scenery complexity a notch. In the times where I took off the limiter, I would see 40-60fps at Flightbeam airports with the PMDG NGX, whereas the old system would be ~28 to 35 but stuttery. After finding my sweet spot between NVinspector, settings, and tweaks (like FFTF), my locked 30 fps looks so smooth that I actually can't tell a difference between the sim and a 60 fps video. 

 

It could help your loading times a little (possibly texture loading), but getting an SSD for the sim would be the true answer to that. 

 

If you are happy with your current setup, then you could hold off and continue to let prices trickle down. But if you're ready, I'd definitely be able to recommend a Skylake 6600k or 6700k, as it's currently the best of the best. Since upgrading, this is the happiest I have ever been with flight sim

James Schroeder

7900X3D | 4080 Super | G.Skill 64gb 6000mhz CAS36 

 

 

*Should mention I'm running FSX:SE, not P3D*

 

I went from a 4.5ghz 2500k to a 4.6ghz 6600k. Very noticeable improvement in the amount of headroom now available. I lock fps to 30, but I used to see dips down to 25 at times with the most intensive addons. It has never budged more than .5 of a frame on my new system, and I'm also able to turn up autogen and scenery complexity a notch. In the times where I took off the limiter, I would see 40-60fps at Flightbeam airports with the PMDG NGX, whereas the old system would be ~28 to 35 but stuttery. After finding my sweet spot between NVinspector, settings, and tweaks (like FFTF), my locked 30 fps looks so smooth that I actually can't tell a difference between the sim and a 60 fps video. 

 

A Skylake CPU would certainly improve the smoothness, at least it did for me. There's always potential for the GPU drivers and whatnot to cause stutters though. It would help your loading times a little (possibly texture loading), but getting an SSD for the sim would be the true answer to that. 

 

If you are happy with your current setup, then maybe hold off and continue to let prices trickle down. But once you're ready, I'd definitely be able to recommend a Skylake 6600k or 6700k. Since upgrading, this is the happiest I have ever been with flight sim

Yes that is my experience as well.

 

And I agree: If you want to cut your loading times then you should invest in a SSD. These are quite cheap at the moment. I have my main sim on a dedicated SSD and that realy is great. the initial loading times are considerably shorter than from a HDD. Well worth the 60 Euros I spend on that SSD :smile:

IXEG 737 Beta-Tester and First Officer

i7 [email protected], 32GB RAM, Palit GTX 1080 GameRock Premium@2Ghz, Oculus Rift S, ButtKicker
X-Plane 11 latedt version on a Samsung M.2 SSD for speedy loading times

Can I expect any improvements in FPS, smoothness, loading times of textures when going to an I7 [email protected] from an i7 [email protected] including the motherboard and memory changes.

 

Texture loading times, yes. Skylake runs on PCIe 3.0 (as well as your GPU), while Sandy Bridge runs on PCIe 2.0. So the textures will load into VRAM faster, resulting in less gray textures in VC (or other places).

 

Your GPU will spend less time waiting for things and more time rendering.

Jeff Thomson

Texture loading times, yes. Skylake runs on PCIe 3.0 (as well as your GPU), while Sandy Bridge runs on PCIe 2.0. So the textures will load into VRAM faster, resulting in less gray textures in VC (or other places).

As a side note it should be mentioned, that the 9xx series gpus doesn't use all of the bandwith of pcie 2.0

(https://www.pugetsystems.com/labs/articles/Impact-of-PCI-E-Speed-on-Gaming-Performance-518/)

The upgrade should be noticeable , but don't expect miracles

 

0.png

As a side note it should be mentioned, that the 9xx series gpus doesn't use all of the bandwith of pcie 2.0

(https://www.pugetsystems.com/labs/articles/Impact-of-PCI-E-Speed-on-Gaming-Performance-518/)

The upgrade should be noticeable , but don't expect miracles

 

FSX can't really be compared to a game though. It's a completely different animal.

 

It's not some hand-tuned level (like most of those games) with a small viewing distance. It's a huge open world with a 120 km+ viewing distance. So the amount of things that need to be rendered and loaded at any one time is a lot more than those games.

Jeff Thomson

FSX can't really be compared to a game though. It's a completely different animal.

 

It's not some hand-tuned level (like most of those games) with a small viewing distance. It's a huge open world with a 120 km+ viewing distance. So the amount of things that need to be rendered and loaded at any one time is a lot more than those games.

Surely we can agree, that there is an finite amount of resources available? Whether you chose to use it on fsx/p3d or some other game doesn't change that.

 

So, as in my other post, the speed of the gfx card doesn't limit the bandwith of PCIe 2.0, and shouldn't be factored into the considerations... And this is not to say, that he won't have any benefits of the upgrade at all.

 

0.png

  • 3 weeks later...
  • Author
  • Commercial Member

I have now been running P3D v3.5 with my new rig([email protected], MSI GTX 1070, SSD for P3D) for a couple of weeks.

 

I have had a very notisable inrease in both FPS and specially smoothness. Loading times has also decreased some.

 

Running PMDG's B737NGX and B777 with REX Texture, Active Sky, ORBX, Megascenery and detailed airports at high setting is now superb. No stutters, only butter like flying

in all sceneries.

 

My homecockpit's 7 screens are smooth and very playable. All from ONLY 1 PC.

 

Well worth the money spent. 

Roar Kristensen    www.flightsim4fun.com

P3Dv4 with Opencockpits hardware controlled by OC4BAv4 for immersive PMDG B737/777/747 flying

XPLANE 11 with Opencockpits hardware controlled by OC4BA_XP for immersive  B737 flying

rmMShli.jpg?1 WylQl0J.jpg?3

  • Commercial Member

Texture loading times, yes. Skylake runs on PCIe 3.0 (as well as your GPU), while Sandy Bridge runs on PCIe 2.0. So the textures will load into VRAM faster, resulting in less gray textures in VC (or other places).

 

Before they get on that PCIe bus, they need to get loaded from storage, which is several orders of magnitude slower. Whether the speed limit on the Interstate is 55 or 85 doesn't matter much if you first have to drive 20 miles on a two-lane road. :)

 

Cheers!

 

Luke

Luke Kolin

I make simFDR, the most advanced flight data recorder for FSX, Prepar3D and X-Plane.

For simming I think you are better of going with a I7 4790K, but I don't know about an I7 6700

Why?

Mike Avallone

[email protected],Corsair H115i cooler,ASUS 2080TI,GSkill 32GB pc3600 ram, 2 WD black NVME ssd drives, ASUS maximus hero MB

 

I have now been running P3D v3.5 with my new rig([email protected], MSI GTX 1070, SSD for P3D) for a couple of weeks.

 

I have had a very notisable inrease in both FPS and specially smoothness. Loading times has also decreased some.

 

Running PMDG's B737NGX and B777 with REX Texture, Active Sky, ORBX, Megascenery and detailed airports at high setting is now superb. No stutters, only butter like flying

in all sceneries.

 

My homecockpit's 7 screens are smooth and very playable. All from ONLY 1 PC.

 

Well worth the money spent. 

 

You spec is the same as mine other than my 1070 is a zotac.  Your findings are identical to mine, while FPS doesn't seem much different, the smoothness and lack of stutters is a completely different story.

 

Only running one screen, but performance is night and day from what my 4790k @ 4.5ghz and 970 was

P3D v4.5 MSFS2020 Hisense 50" 4K TV

Ryzen 9600x 64gb DDR5 6000mhz, Asrock B650m HDV/M.2 Gigabyte 16gb 9070XT, Thermalright Aqua Elite 240mm  2TB NVMe Boot/FS2020 Drive, 2TB NVMe P3D Drive.

Saitek Yoke, Pedals, Radio Panel, Switch Panel, 2 x FiPs

UKV6427

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