Ugh so my middle one wants a gaming PC. She has a T495 Ryzen 5 3500U pro laptop which isn't cutting the mustard now. Plus the constant fan noise is pissing me off
Anyone care to comment on the following idea:
- Ryzen 5600G
- 16Gb corsair LPX 3200 RAM (2x 8Gb)
- 500Gb Samsung 870 Evo Plus
- Be quiet 600W supply
- Lian Li Liancool 205M
- have monitor, keyboard, mouse, MSI B550 board, be quiet cooler floating around already which can go in it. Oh and a ripped off win 10 pro license
Will upgrade the GPU next year...
have several here. Contact me if you want. Also have GPUs to go along with those. From 1660ti to 3090 ...
would go for a 5600, not the G type, and an external GPU. Or the 3600x. The performance boost you are getting from 5600 imho does not make an upgrade mandatory.
As for RAM, all AMDs just love high speed memory. Would go for 3600, if not faster, CL as low as you can reasonably afford.
Have made good experience with Trident Z 3600 Cl16, but that was some time ago.
SSD: try to find a Samsung PM981. Least troublesome and fastest SSD I had found a while back. The thing to go for if you do not want PCIE4 with your SSD.
600W will be sufficient for 2070/2070 Super and below, 3060 and most likely 3060ti. The 3070ti I have here wants a 750W PSU ...
CPU TDP is about 120W - 140W depending on overclocking or not. (count in a reasonable margin, and I am factoring in the non-G version). I'd summarily add about 100W for the rest (mainboard, DVD if needed, RAM (if overclocked), fans, SSD, HDDs).
Which would give you about 250 W headroom for a GPU if you want to run the PSU in the most favorable load conditions.
250W would give you a 2060/2070/3050/3060/3060ti and a wee bit of headroom. Note: the 30 series GPUs have peak loads that make you shiver unless you undervolt them. A 3080 can easily go up to 500W spikes which would immediately shut down your PSU as the 12V rail could not handle it.
If you are planning to upgrade the GPU anyway and stick with AMD (which is perfectly fine), get a starter GPU which you can flip. Some older model like a 970 or 1060. And throw it out at a later point in time.
just my 2c
If you're planning to do actual A-title gaming and planning the upgrade to a 30
xx, I'd go a wee bit more overhead on the PSU, myself. All the 30
xx GPUs will spike huge under fast framerate rendering, especially using oversampling or ray-tracing which is
finally getting some love from the game devs. If he's going to stream any of his gameplay, this adds even more load; which these GPUs will gladly eat like candy, but they
will suck the juice.
If you have any
dreams of running anything like MS Flight Sim, I would be going at least 800W if not 1KW - Between AMD's Auto-OC and NVidia's various gaming profiles... with most of the A-titles nowadays,
during gameplay you can be OC-ing BOTH CPU and GPU by 20% or more for several seconds at a a time using relatively tame factory profile presets.
In short...
IMO, Saskia's being too kind with the PSU pain pill. 600W is just... barely there for a "my generation" build. It would be running hard even on my 2080Super based system.
If you already have the 600W PSU and are going to use a low-end GPU until you upgrade to a 30xx, I'd plan on upgrading the PSU at the same time.Agreed on 5600/5600X vs 5600G; pay the extra money and skip the 5600G. The 5600G is known for a lot of issues with "out of the box" compatibility even on B550 MBs.
AMD/Ryzen had problems before with the bootstrapping conundrum; where a MB needed to be flashed to support newer CPUs, but couldn't until booted on an older CPU:
https://www.amd.com/en/support/kb/faq/pa-105 It is my understanding that the 5600G/B550 combination continues this fine tradition, and unless you have one of the MBs that can upgrade the BIOS without a CPU installed, you get to play this particular game of whack-a-mole.
But the big problem with 5600G is that you won't have PCIe4.0 available on any general purpose slots, and you may not even have PCIe4.0 speeds to the NVMe and GPU slot depending on the combination of 5600G and MB/chipset. I know you probably don't care about the GP PCIe3.0 slots, as B550 MB already, but no PCIe4 speeds to the GPU slot is a big deal.
I also agree on maxing out speed over qty for RAM... except that
now, the "standard build" for A-title gaming uses DDR4-4400, and entry-level is DDR4-4000. This matters with gaming, as all the "Auto-OC" built into the BIOS uses the XMP profiles associated with these speed ratings to configure the OC speed profiles which are most commonly used for gaming.
So
unless you or your son feel like spending days manually configuring those memory OC profiles by trial and error, do yourself a favor and shop the faster DDR4 speeds, even if the latency looks like crap.
16GB is still enough for all A-titles unless you're jumping to 2K/4K video (2K/1440P will be a wee bit cramped; not going to do oversampling with 16GB), and most of the MSI 550 boards are quad-slot, so I'd go with the fastest 16GB kit I can afford at least DDR4-4000, then plan on bumping up with another kit in the future. If you can afford more on RAM now, substitute 32GB and upgrade to 64GB in the future.
SSD...
Until you're ready to bump up to a X570 MB where you know all your GPU/NVMe slots are PCIe4.0, the real limiting factor is the Phison E12 controller and PCIe3.0. Improvements in read/write speeds on any PCIe3 NVMe SSDs are going to be incremental at best. You've seen the difference between PCIe3 and PCIe4 on your current gonad-crusher MacBook.
Since you already have the B550, I'd say go with any established-brand Phison E12-based NVMe drive... but unless you can find one you know is pre-COVID manufacture, I'd look out and research carefully on ALL the current EVO SSDs, as
SamSuck has been doing "undocumented revisions" on their parts/specs due to component shortages (specifically the 870/970Plus you mentioned, plus others):https://www.tomshardware.com/news/samsung-is-swapping-ssd-parts-too Alternately, since this is supposedly going to be a gaming rig and
not the daily driver/main PC for essential day-to-day (I
always recommend this be the case with your gaming rig for security reasons), you could just shop your best deal on 2 "decent" NVMe drives and put them in RAID 0, as long as you don't mind using SLEEP mode. If you or your son are one of those "gotta boot it cold every time" people, RAID 0 adds 15-30 seconds every startup as the BIOS reassesses the RAID every. fucking. boot.
This setup is still error-free after 3 years.
That post was a monster.
These points are my opinion as a gamer PC builder, and I may have misremembered something or be completely wrong on another.
mnem
As always, take anything I say with a grain of salt big enuf to pickle a dwagon. YMMV, IANAL, DQMOT, WTFBBQ, DILLIGAF...?