February 16, 20188 yr EXPERT ADVICE!! What you think? Any changes - upgrades or downgrades? I’m not 100% knowledgable in computer specs etc but from the research I’ve done I think this should be more than enough for good smooth performance and graphics? Any help guys would be appreciated I’m ready to click buy 🙊total Cost is just under £3000 Overclocked CPU Overclocked Intel® Core™ i9-7900X Ten Core (3.30GHz @ up to 4.6GHz) Motherboard ASUS® ROG STRIX X299-E GAMING: ATX, USB 3.1, SATA 6 GB/s, WIFI - RGB Ready Memory (RAM) 32GB Corsair VENGEANCE DDR4 2133MHz (4 x 8GB) Graphics Card 11GB NVIDIA GEFORCE GTX 1080 Ti - HDMI, 3x DP GeForce - GTX VR Ready! 1st Hard Disk NOT REQUIRED 1st M.2 SSD Drive 1TB SAMSUNG PM961 M.2, PCIe NVMe (up to 3000MB/R, 1700MB/W) Power Supply CORSAIR 1000W RMx SERIES™ MODULAR 80 PLUS® GOLD, ULTRA QUIET Processor Cooling Corsair H100i V2 Hydro Series High Performance CPU Cooler USB Options MIN. 2 x USB 3.0 & 6 x USB 2.0 PORTS @ BACK PANEL + MIN. 2 FRONT PORT Operating System Genuine Windows 10 Home 64 Bit Paul Wain
February 16, 20188 yr Any reason why you're going for an i9-7900x? There isn't currently a flight sim that could efficiently use that many cores and you could save a huge amount of money going for an i7-8700K which is probably the best CPU for simming at the moment. With the money you save you could buy another SSD (a second drive is always a good idea) and faster memory (3200MHz). i7-14700k | Asus ROG STRIX Z790-F Gaming WIFI | 32GB DDR5 RAM | MSI RTX 4080 Super | WD Black SN850X 1TB & 2TB | Corsair HX1000i ATX3.0 | MSI MAG401QR 40" monitor | Win 11 Pro 64-bit | Meta Quest 3
February 16, 20188 yr Author 2 hours ago, vortex681 said: Any reason why you're going for an i9-7900x? There isn't currently a flight sim that could efficiently use that many cores and you could save a huge amount of money going for an i7-8700K which is probably the best CPU for simming at the moment. With the money you save you could buy another SSD (a second drive is always a good idea) and faster memory (3200MHz). Thank you for your reply And no particular reason I just thought It would be good. So for P3D You think 8700K is the best? If it is then it takes £500 off so massive price difference. and I was thinking of a second SSD drive but I don’t know if I will see any benefit of doing so? I only have one now unless you can convince me 😂 Paul Wain
February 16, 20188 yr 26 minutes ago, paulwain said: So for P3D You think 8700K is the best? If it is then it takes £500 off so massive price difference. and I was thinking of a second SSD drive but I don’t know if I will see any benefit of doing so? I only have one now unless you can convince me 😂 The 7900x is a great CPU if you really need it for true multi-core apps but for P3D, single-core performance is still probably the most important factor and that's where the 8700k shines. Plus, overclocking it to 4.9 or 5.0GHz shouldn't be too difficult. With regards to second drives, I'm a big believer in not putting all of your eggs in one basket. Plus, it's always useful to be able to back up important data in the event that your primary drive fails (less likely with modern SSDs but certainly not impossible). At the very least I'd go for a large HDD in addition to your SSD. Unless you're using your system exclusively for P3D, you'll probably be surprised at how quickly you fill up a single 1TB drive. i7-14700k | Asus ROG STRIX Z790-F Gaming WIFI | 32GB DDR5 RAM | MSI RTX 4080 Super | WD Black SN850X 1TB & 2TB | Corsair HX1000i ATX3.0 | MSI MAG401QR 40" monitor | Win 11 Pro 64-bit | Meta Quest 3
February 16, 20188 yr I would agree with Vortex re CPU and also agree regarding the rapidity in which drives fill up. In addition, why a 1000 watt PSU? Given that components are getting more power efficient, you don't need 1000 watts unless you're contemplating SLI. I'm a big fan of EVGA PSU's currently. Very reliable, great price and a ten year warranty. Regarding RAM, if you go for the 8700K (recommended) you would benefit from more speed. 3200 MHz or 3400 MHz is the sweet spot. GSkill Ripjaw V or Trident Z I would recomend.
February 16, 20188 yr I bought a new system from Jetline back in the summer and have been extremely happy with it. The only changes I made was going to Intel SSDs and air cooling. I've always felt the bigger the power supply the better. :) I Earned My Spurs in Vietnam
February 16, 20188 yr Hi Folks, Also like EVGA and they have a handy power supply calculator... Many need less power than they think - LOL - although Tim Allen would probably disapprove... https://www.evga.com/power-meter/ Regards, Scott
February 16, 20188 yr Author Guys I really appricate your help and opnions So thanks to you ive made a few changes what you think? *Updated** Overclocked Intel® Core™ i7-7800X Six Core (3.50GHz @ up to 4.6GHz) Added an extra SSD Drive - 500GB SAMSUNG 960 EVO M.2, PCIe NVMe (up to 3200MB/R, 1900MB/W) Power Supply: Changed from 1000w TO CORSAIR 750W TXm SERIES™ SEMI-MODULAR 80 PLUS® GOLD, ULTRA QUIET Processor Cooling: Changed To LIQUID Corsair H100i V2 Hydro Cooler w/ PCS Liquid Series Ultra Quiet Fans Anything else I need to consider, or shall I go ahead and press BUY Paul Wain
February 16, 20188 yr The price difference is huge. memspeed you can run the I9 x299 and I5-I7 Z370 easy up to 3800-4000mhz IPC on same FRQ very little diff bettween them if any. Overclocking 4.9-5ghz on one core and the rest at 4.7ghz with HT off, you dont need HT on 10-18 core cpus for the sim. When run dual GPUs the x299 is little faster , more pcie lanes. I run a 7920X in the sim 5.0 ghz on p3d main tread the rest at 6cores 4.9 and 5 at 4.8. shall test the 7980XE in p3d 4.2 next week , had a lot testing 4way SLI ( 4x1080Ti) have 2 asus 1080Ti Strix OC and 5 Galax 1080TI HOF watercooled http://www.galax.com/en/graphics-card/hof/galax-geforcer-gtx-1080-ti-hof-watercooled.html Have a ASUS Maximus X Apex Mobo Z370 and a 8600k not tested yet , on the way a binned 8700k 5.4ghz chip Shall be fun to compare them in P3D V4.2 cant say anyting but now a run the 5.0ghz 7920X in the sim it work much smoother then my old 5.3ghz 7700k 900w from the wall , with 7920X at 5.0ghz with 2x1080ti SLI http://
February 16, 20188 yr Looking forward to your comparison results Westman. Thanks for sharing your tests with us. Ted [email protected] ghz, Noctua C12P CPU air cooler, Asus Z77, 2 x 4gb DDR3 Corsair 2200 mhz cl 9, EVGA 1080ti, Sony 55" 900E TV 3840 x 2160, Windows 7-64, FSX, P3dv3, P3dv4
February 16, 20188 yr 2 hours ago, Bluestar said: I've always felt the bigger the power supply the better. :) Not really. No harm in having an oversized PSU of course, it's just a waste of money. There is a case for having a PSU that runs at it's most efficient point in the power curve most of the time and that's usually around 60%. But with modern PSU's, even when heavily loaded they are still VERY efficient, in the upper 90% efficiency range. A 750 watt PSU in a modern system is perfectly adequate, with spare capacity, and will be functioning most of the time in it's most efficient band.
February 16, 20188 yr 2 hours ago, paulwain said: Guys I really appricate your help and opnions So thanks to you ive made a few changes what you think? *Updated** Overclocked Intel® Core™ i7-7800X Six Core (3.50GHz @ up to 4.6GHz) Added an extra SSD Drive - 500GB SAMSUNG 960 EVO M.2, PCIe NVMe (up to 3200MB/R, 1900MB/W) Power Supply: Changed from 1000w TO CORSAIR 750W TXm SERIES™ SEMI-MODULAR 80 PLUS® GOLD, ULTRA QUIET Processor Cooling: Changed To LIQUID Corsair H100i V2 Hydro Cooler w/ PCS Liquid Series Ultra Quiet Fans Anything else I need to consider, or shall I go ahead and press BUY No... the i7 8700K! And Z370 motherboard. 3200 MHz or 3400 MHz RAM
February 16, 20188 yr What Martin said 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
February 17, 20188 yr 17 hours ago, paulwain said: Overclocked Intel® Core™ i7-7800X Six Core (3.50GHz @ up to 4.6GHz) Don't do it. The 7800x has a max turbo speed of 4GHz so it's already got a significant overclock to get it to 4.6GHz. The max turbo speed for the 8700k is already 4.7GHz before overclocking! Plus, the 8700k has a much larger internal cache (12MB), it costs about the same as the 7800x but the motherboards tend to cost less. It's a no-brainer! Also, go for the faster RAM. i7-14700k | Asus ROG STRIX Z790-F Gaming WIFI | 32GB DDR5 RAM | MSI RTX 4080 Super | WD Black SN850X 1TB & 2TB | Corsair HX1000i ATX3.0 | MSI MAG401QR 40" monitor | Win 11 Pro 64-bit | Meta Quest 3
February 17, 20188 yr On 2/16/2018 at 11:00 AM, paulwain said: Overclocked Intel® Core™ i7-7800X Six Core (3.50GHz @ up to 4.6GHz) Added an extra SSD Drive - 500GB SAMSUNG 960 EVO M.2, PCIe NVMe (up to 3200MB/R, 1900MB/W) Power Supply: Changed from 1000w TO CORSAIR 750W TXm SERIES™ SEMI-MODULAR 80 PLUS® GOLD, ULTRA QUIET Processor Cooling: Changed To LIQUID Corsair H100i V2 Hydro Cooler w/ PCS Liquid Series Ultra Quiet Fans As several have said, Paul, go with the i7-8700K. It has greater legs than the 7800X, which gives you upside flexibility. I am also building a system right now and went with the 8700K, the ASUS Maximus X Hero X370 M/B, G.Skill TridentZ DDR4 4000, and the Corsair HX1000i PSU since I'm going with an SLI setup. My personal philosophy is to go for as much capability as I can when I build a new PC since I only do this every 4 years or so. Have fun! You'll love your new build. Doug Miannay PC: i9-13900K (OC 6.1) | ASUS Maximus Z790 Hero | ASUS Strix RTX4080 (OC) | ASUS ROG Strix LC II 360 AIO | 32GB G.Skill DDR5 TridentZ RGB 6400Hz | Samsung 990 Pro 1TB M.2 (OS/Apps) | Samsung 990 Pro 2TB M.2 (Sim) | Samsung 990 Pro 2TB M.2 (Games) | Fractal Design Define R7 Blackout Case | Win11 Pro x64
Archived
This topic is now archived and is closed to further replies.