Brilliant videos Particle!
I really like your case and how you manage cables!
It looks so familiar to my own computer! Only difference is that I have some HDDs on the floor because they can't fit into my case (TT Soprano)!
Keep up good work!
Brilliant videos Particle!
I really like your case and how you manage cables!
It looks so familiar to my own computer! Only difference is that I have some HDDs on the floor because they can't fit into my case (TT Soprano)!
Keep up good work!
RiG1: Ryzen 7 1700 @4.0GHz 1.39V, Asus X370 Prime, G.Skill RipJaws 2x8GB 3200MHz CL14 Samsung B-die, TuL Vega 56 Stock, Samsung SS805 100GB SLC SDD (OS Drive) + 512GB Evo 850 SSD (2nd OS Drive) + 3TB Seagate + 1TB Seagate, BeQuiet PowerZone 1000W
RiG2: HTPC AMD A10-7850K APU, 2x8GB Kingstone HyperX 2400C12, AsRock FM2A88M Extreme4+, 128GB SSD + 640GB Samsung 7200, LG Blu-ray Recorder, Thermaltake BACH, Hiper 4M880 880W PSU
SmartPhone Samsung Galaxy S7 EDGE
XBONE paired with 55''Samsung LED 3D TV
24464 was score with 12 cpus so that's like each cpu is getting 2038.666. on avg anyways. what is the speed up now that u have 1 ram in each cpu atleast?
mobo: strix b350f
gpu: rx580 1366/2000
cpu: ryzen 1700 @ 3.8ghz
ram: 32 gb gskill 2400 @ 3000
psu: coarsair 1kw
hdd's: samsung 500gb ssd 1tb & 3tb hdd
This is true. Still, the scaling seems very low to me right now. I guess Particle has some tweaking to do with the memory or somethings. I would expect ~10x scaling at least. 28% is a lot of performance to be losing don't you think? Istanbuls are supposed to be very efficient in multi-CPU setups.
not in the vid. tha's AFTER he switched rams. but the post he had in here earlier was when rams were on cpu0. i'm just wondering how much, if any cpu scaling went up after giving each their own mem. ( even if single channel ) i get 2200 pts with single core @ 2.64 ghz ram @ 264 3-4-3-10
mobo: strix b350f
gpu: rx580 1366/2000
cpu: ryzen 1700 @ 3.8ghz
ram: 32 gb gskill 2400 @ 3000
psu: coarsair 1kw
hdd's: samsung 500gb ssd 1tb & 3tb hdd
the poor scaling is the software not the hardware in this case. if the scene was larger and more complex you would see a much larger increase in performance
watching the video you can quickly see how badly C10 is at trying to balance core loads. if they didnt try to render a whole row at once, it would probably scale much better.
Yes, like many people (including myself..) have said earlier in this thread, CB10's scaling doesn't work properly for more then 8 threads. The engine is showing its age, a way better test is, for example, Frybench
It scales with ram speed as well, which means my Dual Gainestown totally owns the Dual Harpertown here, even tho in CB10 the Harpertown wins. Try it particle, under 4 minutes is good![]()
Guess that's not something my Opties are good at. Render time was 5m26s at 12 x 2508. If it's memory sensitive though, it might be suffering from my single channel DDR2-800 @ 780 with vanilla timings.
Particle's First Rule of Online Technical Discussion:
As a thread about any computer related subject has its length approach infinity, the likelihood and inevitability of a poorly constructed AMD vs. Intel fight also exponentially increases.
Rule 1A:
Likewise, the frequency of a car pseudoanalogy to explain a technical concept increases with thread length. This will make many people chuckle, as computer people are rarely knowledgeable about vehicular mechanics.
Rule 2:
When confronted with a post that is contrary to what a poster likes, believes, or most often wants to be correct, the poster will pick out only minor details that are largely irrelevant in an attempt to shut out the conflicting idea. The core of the post will be left alone since it isn't easy to contradict what the person is actually saying.
Rule 2A:
When a poster cannot properly refute a post they do not like (as described above), the poster will most likely invent fictitious counter-points and/or begin to attack the other's credibility in feeble ways that are dramatic but irrelevant. Do not underestimate this tactic, as in the online world this will sway many observers. Do not forget: Correctness is decided only by what is said last, the most loudly, or with greatest repetition.
Rule 3:
When it comes to computer news, 70% of Internet rumors are outright fabricated, 20% are inaccurate enough to simply be discarded, and about 10% are based in reality. Grains of salt--become familiar with them.
Remember: When debating online, everyone else is ALWAYS wrong if they do not agree with you!
Random Tip o' the Whatever
You just can't win. If your product offers feature A instead of B, people will moan how A is stupid and it didn't offer B. If your product offers B instead of A, they'll likewise complain and rant about how anyone's retarded cousin could figure out A is what the market wants.
hi particle,
i havent posted in this thread yet, but i have been following it, i just wanted to say that has been very interesting to see this evolve into 12 core goodness, and too see the results,
i was also very surprised to hear that you sound exactly like you post, if that makes sense?
keep the results coming, nice to see a thread in the AMD section that has some meat in it.
RiG1: Ryzen 7 1700 @4.0GHz 1.39V, Asus X370 Prime, G.Skill RipJaws 2x8GB 3200MHz CL14 Samsung B-die, TuL Vega 56 Stock, Samsung SS805 100GB SLC SDD (OS Drive) + 512GB Evo 850 SSD (2nd OS Drive) + 3TB Seagate + 1TB Seagate, BeQuiet PowerZone 1000W
RiG2: HTPC AMD A10-7850K APU, 2x8GB Kingstone HyperX 2400C12, AsRock FM2A88M Extreme4+, 128GB SSD + 640GB Samsung 7200, LG Blu-ray Recorder, Thermaltake BACH, Hiper 4M880 880W PSU
SmartPhone Samsung Galaxy S7 EDGE
XBONE paired with 55''Samsung LED 3D TV
Your CB10 score is fine:
http://www.techreport.com/r.x/optero.../cinebench.gif
I'd get at least two ram sticks for each socket stat, Particle, otherwise you were better off with Shanghai
Perkam
Just to make sure everyone knows: To all of you who have been supportive and extending compliments--I really do appreciate it. Thanks a bunch folks. You guys are what makes this project fun to do in the first place.
As for RAM, that has been and still is on my list of to-dos, but I'm going to wait until I get paid this Friday.I've spent a boatload of money already, and I'm below my normal reserve line due to some problems encountered during this build. The RAM I use is frequently out of stock anyway, and Newegg doesn't predict they'll have more until Friday so that times up nicely. Most ECC/Reg is 667 or slower. I've got the fancy shmancy 800 stuff! (Woo, fancy $35 RAM ftw) hehe I only bought two sticks initially so I could run in a minimal state if my mountains of regular RAM didn't work (it didn't).
vCore
I do still need some help on this one. I'd like to get it up to 1.30V and try my luck overclocking a little higher. I still haven't found a way around the (designed) behavior of the system to where if a VID above MaxVID (1.225V) is set, the system ignores it and re-writes 1.225V to the CurrentVID register. I need a way to overwrite the MaxVID register or something, whever it is. I emailed one of those Crystal CPU warriors from the TLB adventure, but he either hasn't noticed my PM or isn't interested. A hardware mod isn't out of the question, either, provided anyone knows how to do it. We need to get this truck rolling at 2.8 or 3.0 GHz I think.![]()
Particle's First Rule of Online Technical Discussion:
As a thread about any computer related subject has its length approach infinity, the likelihood and inevitability of a poorly constructed AMD vs. Intel fight also exponentially increases.
Rule 1A:
Likewise, the frequency of a car pseudoanalogy to explain a technical concept increases with thread length. This will make many people chuckle, as computer people are rarely knowledgeable about vehicular mechanics.
Rule 2:
When confronted with a post that is contrary to what a poster likes, believes, or most often wants to be correct, the poster will pick out only minor details that are largely irrelevant in an attempt to shut out the conflicting idea. The core of the post will be left alone since it isn't easy to contradict what the person is actually saying.
Rule 2A:
When a poster cannot properly refute a post they do not like (as described above), the poster will most likely invent fictitious counter-points and/or begin to attack the other's credibility in feeble ways that are dramatic but irrelevant. Do not underestimate this tactic, as in the online world this will sway many observers. Do not forget: Correctness is decided only by what is said last, the most loudly, or with greatest repetition.
Rule 3:
When it comes to computer news, 70% of Internet rumors are outright fabricated, 20% are inaccurate enough to simply be discarded, and about 10% are based in reality. Grains of salt--become familiar with them.
Remember: When debating online, everyone else is ALWAYS wrong if they do not agree with you!
Random Tip o' the Whatever
You just can't win. If your product offers feature A instead of B, people will moan how A is stupid and it didn't offer B. If your product offers B instead of A, they'll likewise complain and rant about how anyone's retarded cousin could figure out A is what the market wants.
Yep! Those are the CB10 scores I'm comparing his thread to. Now that 2435 is running 100mhz faster, but I noticed that CB10 is sensitive to memory speeds. When I went from 4GB@1066 to 8GB@800 there was a noticeable decrease in rendering time. At 800mhz I was able to tighten up my timings quite a bit and that helps too.
Particle is a couple of good DDR2 ECC 800mhz kits away from extracting full power from those Six-Cores.
I haven't played with the timings yet at all. I could see ECC memory in theory granting more overclocking headroom since it can correct single bit errors if they don't happen too frequently, I suppose. Not sure I'd want to be that far out on the edge though!You could probably use the ECC memory just fine if your motherboard exposes the options, just not ECC + registered. I'm not sure what the registered buffer does to overclocking stability.
Particle's First Rule of Online Technical Discussion:
As a thread about any computer related subject has its length approach infinity, the likelihood and inevitability of a poorly constructed AMD vs. Intel fight also exponentially increases.
Rule 1A:
Likewise, the frequency of a car pseudoanalogy to explain a technical concept increases with thread length. This will make many people chuckle, as computer people are rarely knowledgeable about vehicular mechanics.
Rule 2:
When confronted with a post that is contrary to what a poster likes, believes, or most often wants to be correct, the poster will pick out only minor details that are largely irrelevant in an attempt to shut out the conflicting idea. The core of the post will be left alone since it isn't easy to contradict what the person is actually saying.
Rule 2A:
When a poster cannot properly refute a post they do not like (as described above), the poster will most likely invent fictitious counter-points and/or begin to attack the other's credibility in feeble ways that are dramatic but irrelevant. Do not underestimate this tactic, as in the online world this will sway many observers. Do not forget: Correctness is decided only by what is said last, the most loudly, or with greatest repetition.
Rule 3:
When it comes to computer news, 70% of Internet rumors are outright fabricated, 20% are inaccurate enough to simply be discarded, and about 10% are based in reality. Grains of salt--become familiar with them.
Remember: When debating online, everyone else is ALWAYS wrong if they do not agree with you!
Random Tip o' the Whatever
You just can't win. If your product offers feature A instead of B, people will moan how A is stupid and it didn't offer B. If your product offers B instead of A, they'll likewise complain and rant about how anyone's retarded cousin could figure out A is what the market wants.
Very interesting thread!
It actually made me take a look at pricing on the Shanghai and Istanbul Opterons, and while two hexacores seem a little too rich for me price wise, I actually found two Shanghai 2376s to have very good pricing. I think I'll hold off upgrading for a few months to see if the usual suspects (Supermicro?) will release dual socket boards based on the new AMD chipsets, and how the Lynnfield release goes.
I'd love to see some Arma II benchmarks Particle, my 3,8 GHz E7200 suffers badly when there is a lot of AI, I need more cores I thinkI'm actually CPU limited in gaming at 1920x1200 with a 1 GB 4870 and a 3,8 GHz Core 2 Duo, who would have thought?
Obsolescence be thy name
Thanks, Frodin. I too am hoping for some 800-series chipset boards this fall. As for Arma II, I have a bit of bad news there. It appears to be bugged out--it won't run with 12 cores in a system. It'll run with 6 cores/1 CPU just fine and a guy on a skulltrail system can run it (2 quads), but with 12 cores it just dies when the menu should be loading up.
Particle's First Rule of Online Technical Discussion:
As a thread about any computer related subject has its length approach infinity, the likelihood and inevitability of a poorly constructed AMD vs. Intel fight also exponentially increases.
Rule 1A:
Likewise, the frequency of a car pseudoanalogy to explain a technical concept increases with thread length. This will make many people chuckle, as computer people are rarely knowledgeable about vehicular mechanics.
Rule 2:
When confronted with a post that is contrary to what a poster likes, believes, or most often wants to be correct, the poster will pick out only minor details that are largely irrelevant in an attempt to shut out the conflicting idea. The core of the post will be left alone since it isn't easy to contradict what the person is actually saying.
Rule 2A:
When a poster cannot properly refute a post they do not like (as described above), the poster will most likely invent fictitious counter-points and/or begin to attack the other's credibility in feeble ways that are dramatic but irrelevant. Do not underestimate this tactic, as in the online world this will sway many observers. Do not forget: Correctness is decided only by what is said last, the most loudly, or with greatest repetition.
Rule 3:
When it comes to computer news, 70% of Internet rumors are outright fabricated, 20% are inaccurate enough to simply be discarded, and about 10% are based in reality. Grains of salt--become familiar with them.
Remember: When debating online, everyone else is ALWAYS wrong if they do not agree with you!
Random Tip o' the Whatever
You just can't win. If your product offers feature A instead of B, people will moan how A is stupid and it didn't offer B. If your product offers B instead of A, they'll likewise complain and rant about how anyone's retarded cousin could figure out A is what the market wants.
Yes, it is very memory intensive. My Gainestown at 3Ghz with Tri Channel DDR3-1066 C7 takes around 3:30-3:40 to complete.
And here is the Harper on its 24/7 setting, which you managed to beat even though a pair of 4Ghz Harpers would be faster in most other apps. Even though they got QuadChannel FB they are somewhat limited by the FSB interface, even at FSB450.
Bookmarks