- Joined
- Sep 14, 2020
- Messages
- 558 (0.37/day)
- Location
- Greece
System Name | Office / HP Prodesk 490 G3 MT (ex-office) |
---|---|
Processor | Intel 13700 (90° limit) / Intel i7-6700 |
Motherboard | Asus TUF Gaming H770 Pro / HP 805F H170 |
Cooling | Noctua NH-U14S / Stock |
Memory | G. Skill Trident XMP 2x16gb DDR5 6400MHz cl32 / Samsung 2x8gb 2133MHz DDR4 |
Video Card(s) | Asus RTX 3060 Ti Dual OC GDDR6X / Zotac GTX 1650 GDDR6 OC |
Storage | Samsung 2tb 980 PRO MZ / Samsung SSD 1TB 860 EVO + WD blue HDD 1TB (WD10EZEX) |
Display(s) | Eizo FlexScan EV2455 - 1920x1200 / Panasonic TX-32LS490E 32'' LED 1920x1080 |
Case | Nanoxia Deep Silence 8 Pro / HP microtower |
Audio Device(s) | On board |
Power Supply | Seasonic Prime PX750 / OEM 300W bronze |
Mouse | MS cheap wired / Logitech cheap wired m90 |
Keyboard | MS cheap wired / HP cheap wired |
Software | W11 / W7 Pro ->10 Pro |
It’s about Skylake and Kaby lake which were way more efficient than the competition. l have a prebuilt PC at the office with i7 6700, the stock cooler is more than enough despite the poor airflow and the CPU is restricted to 65w but still competitive. On the other hand cooling the office’s 3700x (works as a shared mini server) was much more challenging, even without PBO. Of course its multi-core performance is in a different league.It is in English. What don't you understand?
It is about a random Lake (because of the codenames), random Z number from the chipsets' naming scheme and the tremendously high power consumption and heat which will be removed by liquid nitrogen coolers.
What don't you understand?
Last edited: