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Finally time to replace the 2600k - need advice

Soldato
Joined
21 Jan 2008
Posts
8,296
Location
England
Hello,

I've been looking at reviews of the latest CPU's and I'm considering the 10700k or possibly the 10600k.

I've seen a lot of people going on about PCIE 4.0 - I understand that the intel chips don't support it. Do you think PCIE 3.0 will start to bottleneck GPU's in the near future? Bearing in mind I expect to keep this system for a long time just like the 2600k which has been flawless for 9 years now.

My main priority is gaming, so I don't want to get four years down the line and have a bottleneck issue with the latest GPU's at the time.

Thanks!
 
Caporegime
Joined
8 Nov 2008
Posts
28,997
I can't see that there might be a bottleneck in the near future, no, but a long way down the line, I don't know. I doubt it, but obviously I can't say for sure.
 
Last edited:
Associate
Joined
19 Jan 2009
Posts
1,320
Location
England
Hello,

I've been looking at reviews of the latest CPU's and I'm considering the 10700k or possibly the 10600k.

I've seen a lot of people going on about PCIE 4.0 - I understand that the intel chips don't support it. Do you think PCIE 3.0 will start to bottleneck GPU's in the near future? Bearing in mind I expect to keep this system for a long time just like the 2600k which has been flawless for 9 years now.

My main priority is gaming, so I don't want to get four years down the line and have a bottleneck issue with the latest GPU's at the time.

Thanks!

Your current system will have been built in 2011 or 2012. If you want a similar type of longevity I'd buy the best you can afford right now with the most current and future proof feature set.

PCIE 4, although not massively important now, would be a feature I'd be looking for if I wanted my system to be as future proof as possible. With the new consoles sporting 8 core CPUs I'd also not buy anything less than and 8 Core/16 thread part now.

You could go AMD B550/X570 now with a potential CPU upgrade next year or wait to see what Intel releases next with PCIE 4?

I was in a very similar situation to yourself and have decided to replace a 2500k system with an 8c/16t CPU on an X570 board. It's weird but the motherboard on my 2500k build, from 2011, was one of the first to sport PCIE 3 compatibility.
 
Soldato
Joined
6 Jun 2008
Posts
11,616
Location
Finland
For year or two performance difference between PCIe v3 and v4 is sure to be pretty marginal.
Assuming no changes in for what GPU is used.
(next-gen consoles unknown factor with their powerful APU)

But with major increase in speed of GPU advance would expect difference to start rising significant in couple years.


Bearing in mind I expect to keep this system for a long time just like the 2600k which has been flawless for 9 years now.
Why are you then even considering max 10 cores Intel, when before Christmas next-gen consoles bring 8 core/16 thread CPU as base line for next-gen games?

Also as another example of future's heavily multithreaded games Star Citizen gives 12c/24t good workout:
https://www.reddit.com/r/starcitizen/comments/dkac5j/i_knew_star_citizen_utilizes_multicore_well/
Without SMT's extra threads majority of cores would be fully occupied.

AMD's Zen3 should be Zen+ to Zen2 level improvement in IPC and if there's also some clock speed advantage, Intel won't be leading in anything.
Except power hogging...
Intel uses "artistic freedom" in TDPs and real maximum power draw/heat output is twice the marketing TDP.
 
Soldato
Joined
22 Nov 2018
Posts
2,710
The unfortunate and depressing longevity of 2600k is due to stagnation in the CPU market. No idea why people hail that as a good thing. Hopefully that's all over and you're next CPU only lasts half that amount of time.

PCIE 3.0 shouldn't bottleneck graphics cards for a good while yet. Although it does depend whether you normally buy high end or low end. The 3090 or 4090 may start to botleneck but the xx50 cards certainly wont.
 
Soldato
Joined
6 Aug 2009
Posts
7,070
Your current system will have been built in 2011 or 2012. If you want a similar type of longevity I'd buy the best you can afford right now with the most current and future proof feature set.

PCIE 4, although not massively important now, would be a feature I'd be looking for if I wanted my system to be as future proof as possible. With the new consoles sporting 8 core CPUs I'd also not buy anything less than and 8 Core/16 thread part now.

You could go AMD B550/X570 now with a potential CPU upgrade next year or wait to see what Intel releases next with PCIE 4?

I was in a very similar situation to yourself and have decided to replace a 2500k system with an 8c/16t CPU on an X570 board. It's weird but the motherboard on my 2500k build, from 2011, was one of the first to sport PCIE 3 compatibility.

This. Basically the same route as me. I expect PCIE 3.0 to hit a bottleneck at the high end with whatever comes after Ampere/Big Navi. X570 gives me upgrades to at least Zen3 and faster 16C32T CPU's, PCIE v4.0 GPUs and NVME up to 7GB/s. I can't see that limiting me for a long time.
 
Soldato
Joined
10 Apr 2013
Posts
3,737
I'd agree AMD's B550 platform seems like the best option for futureproofing. It supports pci-e 4.0 so should work well with faster SSD's which will likely be required for next gen consoles ports.

Likewise support for Ryzen 4000 CPU's with faster performance and increased core counts will also certainly help with upgrades down the line to improve longevity.

That's definitely what I'd buy right now and intend to once B550 ITX boards are available.
 
Soldato
Joined
14 Aug 2009
Posts
2,694
The unfortunate and depressing longevity of 2600k is due to stagnation in the CPU market.

It wouldn't have matter either way if we would have CPUs 2x faster, as the games would have been designed still with the consoles in mind. Perhaps the PC version would have not been as optimized since there's plenty of power to run (if we would have CPUs 2x faster).
 
Soldato
Joined
22 Nov 2018
Posts
2,710
Cause it meant gamers didn't need to upgrade their CPUs for 5+ years.

Yeah but gamers are also moaning that there's no graphics card worth upgrading to from a 1080ti etc. Like a CPU doesn't matter anymore, even though they want faster and faster graphics cards to spend their money on.

The counter argument is that a graphics card is very important for gaming while a CPU no longer is. But that's only because game developers stopped allowing for faster processors in their code due to the fact there weren't any.
 
Soldato
Joined
15 Oct 2019
Posts
11,656
Location
Uk
You should be fine with pcie gen 3 as the top end card has only just about hit the limit of pcie gen 2 that said I would still consider AMD unless you game at 1080p also bear in mind AMD could possibly overtake Intel even in gaming with the zen3 CPUs which will be compatible with the current Boards.
 
Soldato
Joined
14 Aug 2009
Posts
2,694
Yeah and consoles have a weak CPU for the same reason. Stagnation. Progress had stopped.

They have a weak CPU, because AMD had nothing great at the time (Intel did). Same with the GPU. At least nothing that would fit the requirements of a consoles (at the time). They don't get upgraded every year anyway. :)

With that said, I would look at a minimum of a Ryzen 8c/16t from the latest generation (probably wait a bit to see what will be launched soon), ideally 12c/24t.
 
Associate
Joined
16 Jan 2010
Posts
1,415
Location
Earth
I wouldn't buy anything with less than 8 cores/16 threads if you want decent longevity. Personally I'd definitely go 10 core or 12 core if buying right now (because I already have an 8 core 16 thread now). I definitely would NOT consider a 6 core/12 thread OR an 8 core/8 thread CPU if you want it to last 7-10 years.
 
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