- Joined
- Jun 14, 2020
- Messages
- 3,275 (2.05/day)
System Name | Mean machine |
---|---|
Processor | 12900k |
Motherboard | MSI Unify X |
Cooling | Noctua U12A |
Memory | 7600c34 |
Video Card(s) | 4090 Gamerock oc |
Storage | 980 pro 2tb |
Display(s) | Samsung crg90 |
Case | Fractal Torent |
Audio Device(s) | Hifiman Arya / a30 - d30 pro stack |
Power Supply | Be quiet dark power pro 1200 |
Mouse | Viper ultimate |
Keyboard | Blackwidow 65% |
I can test whatever you want, I have to downgrade the bios to enable avx though. But why do you keep insisting about the pl2 numbers? The cpu will never, under any circumstances, pull more than the pl2 it's set to. Ever. Pl2 is the max wattage the cpu will pull for the TAU duration, after which it will drop down to the pl1 number.Well I don't have the chips you're looking for, so you can keep that dishonest tag to yourself
As for testing the 12900k if you can (re)enable AVX512 why don't you do that & test the max power consumption while setting the TDP at say 65W or whatever the BIOS allows, or is that way too honest for you?
The TDP not matching power draw is an amd only thing, tdp is used to describe what cooler ryzen cpus need, not how much power they pull. The actual power draw can be seen from the PPT numbers. Intel doesnt have any tdp settings in the bios. It's just pl1, pl2 and TAU. That's it.
You don't have the cpus but that guy does, you can ask him politely. Why do you think I insist about the efficiency part? I have actually tested it.
1 zen 4 core is around 5-10% more efficient than an ald p core. A rpl p core is around 10% faster than a zen 4 core. So it goes without saying then when Intel cpus have e cores on top of that they Will be more efficient at same wattages.