Hello, so i been seeing this tendency for a while, people saying that 1800x is not worth getting it and you should go for 1700 or 1700x instead.
I fail to understand why. And here is my logic.
With 1800x you get 3.6ghz stock speed and with one core Boost to 4ghz + XFR to 4.1ghz under right circumstances. Which is great! Half of the games, especially mmo's use one core, and it will let you use cpu to the fullest. With 1700 you get 3ghz and up to 3.7ghz. Also 1700x you get 3.4ghz to 3.8ghz boost. These two lower R7 cpu offer you a decent clock speeds, but in a long run you will want to Over Clock them to get over bottle neck or to make it run better in certain programs or games. With 1800x you are safer for longer time, which means that you dont neglect boost and XFR features by over clocking. Also later CPU is better handling clock speeds, since it is tested to get those boosts and XFR to 4.1~ghz, so you basically gamble less on silicon lottery. If it couldn't handle those clock speeds, it would be called 1700 or 1700x.
In my conclusion Ryzen 1800x you are getting better quality chip, which you wont need to OC for some time, i really fail to see the reason for overclocking that cpu at all. By fiddling with clock speed you are just cutting down life time of your cpu and removing features of it too. I guess it all depends on what your goal is. You are benchmark freak, or you want to keep your hardware working for a longer time.
If you think i am wrong, please share your thoughts with me.
Comments
It's really a question of how much money you have, how much you value reliability, and how much time you're willing to spend fiddling with an overclock. The 1800X makes a lot more sense for someone who makes $300k per year and doesn't want to fight with his computer than it does for someone trying to fit a strict $1000 budget for the entire computer.
they are year in front for everything.... unless you are in a big low budget it rarely worth it.
Even if you never overclock, in the long run you'll save a lot of money by purchasing 1700x now and then upgrading your computer a bit sooner. 5% speed CPU speed difference won't matter much, whereas $90 is a lot of money.
Not to mention if you want to buy gaming machine at those prices, then I7 7700K is a lot better alternative. Cheaper Ryzens offer some competition to I5 processors, but in top-end gaming machines I7 7700K offers better performance than anything AMD has available.
They are the same chip - from the same process, the same fab, the same everything. AMD just bins them according to (some metric).
So would overclocking "kill" your chip? Well, overvolting will definitely have some impact on life. Higher temperatures will have some impact. If your CPU would normally last 50 years, and instead because of overclocking it only lasts 20, but you replace it in 5 because something better has come around - then does it really matter?
I would like to know what that metric is, I am betting some people believe the metric is the ability to OC higher as we know the ability to OC can fluctuate quite a bit.
Brenics ~ Just to point out I do believe Chris Roberts is going down as the man who cheated backers and took down crowdfunding for gaming.
That isn't all that dissimilar from what you do while overclocking, except they aren't trying to find the fastest speed - they just run the chip at X.YZ volts and ABCD MHz and see what the power draw and thermals do. If it passes the first test - it's top bin. If not, they drop the clock in increments until they find which bin it falls under.
I'm sure it is a bit more technical than that, because you also have salvage parts and the like, and you have to have a process that is fast and reliable enough to test every chip coming off the line before it's boxed. But that is my layman understanding.
As to the 1800x, I don't see the value in the extra cost personally, unless you want peace of mind.
Source: http://www.eurogamer.net/articles/digitalfoundry-2017-amd-ryzen-7-1700-1700x-vs-1800x-review
Now how about you post your source, please.
I get over 100 FPS non Ultra, and around 50-70 with my 1080ti haven't benched it yet in ultra with the new upgrades I have done ill finish the final ones today.
As i can asume 1800x is 5% increase over 1700x, and it cost 90 to 100 more. In gaming its few frames, but let me ask how does that 5% increase in rendering, for example, not touching OC?
"Be water my friend" - Bruce Lee
I have overclocked nearly every CPU and GPU and RAM in my personal computers since the late 90s. Not once have I lost a part due to a failure related to overclocking. I still have the first CPU I overclocked, a pentium 150mmx, and it still runs, not terribly useful today though. Unless you are constantly pushing a part to its absolute extreme limit, extreme overvolting, or completely disregarding temps they don't just die.
Almost every chip has some form of "turbo" auto-overclocking today, and advanced thermal and energy management to be able to auto-throttle when needed before anything breaks.
*Edit* but it's still fun and there are still some performance gains to be had. I just wouldn't expect another Celeron 300A or i7 920. Some of the lower bin Ryzens definitely make it worth considering again.