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11:11 PM
Looks like Skylake X has a VRM and power problem. A single 8-pin power connector isn't enough to power an overclocked Skylake X. And the VRMs keep overheating. The motherboard that ordered has two 8-pin connectors. And the VRM heatsinks are better than the ones that were tested. But that still doesn't bring much confidence.
Granted, my mobo cost $400 whereas most of the other ones are in the $250 - $300 range.
 
Can't you use the 'ol P=IV equation to check if your mobo is compatible? Intel lists power consumption specs for their server chips, and I've ran into problems before....
 
Those "specs" are only valid for stock configurations.
 
So, when you overclock, voltage typically goes up
 
Basically, if you're targeting the 4.6 - 4.7 GHz with the 1.3v needed to get there, the 10-core 7900X chip will be pulling around 300W under scalar load (non-AVX).
That 300W is enough to cause the 8-pin CPU power connector to reach 90C.
And you don't want plastic cables to reach 90C.
 
Idk, my RAID card reaches 103C and no fucks given
 
11:17 PM
That's a problem for all the low-end X299 mobos which only have one 8-pin power connector.
@Mikhail It's fine if the internals of a component get that hot. But cables can melt or they can be a fire hazard if they touch other components which aren't meant to handle boiling temps.
 
@Mysticial Dare we ask what it might be pulling with AVX, or does that fall under the "get a Mr. Fusion" category?
 
@JerryCoffin I will find out this weekend. I won't intend to do any overclocking. I'll lock the frequency at something like 3.6 GHz. Do all my micro-benchmarks and tuning first.
Then I'll try cranking it up with full AVX512.
I'll be happy if reach 4.0 GHz under full AVX512.
Assuming the power consumption for AVX512 is as serious as I anticipate, I'll probably throw in another of those big red warnings when the program starts up in AVX512 mode.
I did this during the SSE -> AVX transition.
In any case, if I upgrade to the 16 or 18 chip later this year, I'm probably gonna need a new motherboard.
 
Also I think your estimate might be a little high. A single Xeon 2890 (15 PEs) uses about 250 Watts
 
@Mikhail They downclock. We're talking overclocked here. The 5960X at 4.2 GHz will pull 400W under prime95 AVX.
And it's only rated for 140W.
It's a good thing I avoided ASUS this time. Even their high-end boards are having trouble.
Every single one of my non-server builds before this year have been ASUS.
 
If you think ASUS is bad, try Super Mirco. The fucking thing kept shorting my cases, so I painfully covered the standoffs with electrical tape...
 
11:27 PM
I didn't get ASUS this time because:
1. The only video card I found that had RGB and would fit in my case with a figurine was Gigabyte. And I can't sync the RGB if the mobo+video card aren't the same company.
2. The Gigabyte one has RGB from top to bottom. The ASUS ones are ugly and don't.
@Mikhail Tyan has that problem too. The mobo I had was missing a standoff hole in the middle. So the standoff from the case would touch the mobo shorting out the ram slots.
 
@Mysticial I think the last non-ASUS motherboard I had was for a DEC Alpha...
 
My Ryzen mobo also has a VRM overheating problem. But that's because I was water cooling in an mATX case where there's no airflow at all over the motherboard. I had to use a side-panel fan to aim at it.
 
there’s a whole paper to try and convince you that shared_ptr<int> sp = none<shared_ptr>(); is an improvement over shared_ptr<int> sp = shared_ptr<int> {};
 
11:45 PM
I want it
Sounds promising
 
@LucDanton well, OTOH, int i = 0; is an improvement over int i = int{};
 
@milleniumbug I have none<idea>() what you mean
 
@milleniumbug Yeah but I thought shared_ptr<int> sp = nullptr is the same as what Luc said, though I might be wrong
(By what Luc said I mean std::shared_ptr<int> sp = std::shared_ptr<int> {})
 

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