Hardware and Software used, temperatures
Hardware and Software used, temperatures
Mainboards
- Aorus X470 Gaming 7 WIFI for AMD
- Asus ROG STRIX Z390-E GAMING for Intel
Processor
- AMD Ryzen 7 3700X
- Intel Core i9-9900K (Coffee Lake)
- Gigabyte GeForce® RTX 2080 Ti 11G
Memory
- 4 x 8 GB DDR4 3600 XMP and Tweaked tested
CPU cooler
- NZXT Kraken X62 (Intel system)
- Deepcool AS500 (AMD system)
Power Supply Unit
- Seasonic Prime Titanium Ultra 850 W
- Seasonic Connect 750W
Mass storage
- Samsung 970 Evo 1 TB
Monitor
- AOC CU34G2X up to 3440 x 1440
OS related Software
- Windows 10 (latest patches & updates installed)
- DirectX 9/10/11/12 latest End-User Runtime (Download)
- Nvidia GeForce driver latest (Download)
OS related Software
- Windows 10 (latest patches & updates installed)
- DirectX 9/10/11/12 latest End-User Runtime (Download)
- Nvidia GeForce driver latest (Download)
In the practical part, we ran the games at FullHD (1920 x 1080) resolution to avoid a bottleneck caused by the VGA (yeah, the 2080 Ti is not a weak card, but still). We used RTSS to measure the number of frames per second (average fps). The results presented in the graphs are the averages of the values obtained in 3 runs. We will show you this setup running at 3600 MHz (and also overclocked, which in this case involved tuning the timings) later on in the article. Now, for the last thing on this page. Thermal performance was measured with a pyrometer. We ran HCI Design MemTest 6.0 for 15 minutes. The memory kit was operating with XMP activated. In idle mode, the temperature was about 30° Celsius, and it reached 12-13° more under stress testing. Room temperature, at the time of testing, was about 22° Celsius. You also need to keep in mind that the temps should be lower with an air CPU cooler than with an AIO.