Quote from: Rob Stan on September 17, 2022, 16:28:19or even Intel's bizarre PL1, PL2 and PL1=PL2 shenanigansWhy bizarre? PL1 is sustainable limit, PL2 is unsustainable limit, tau is how long it can be sustained and PL1 = PL2 means that the headline boost can be maintained indefinitely (in other words, there is no second-stage, time-limited boost). Of course, assuming a cooling system can take it. TDP is just a guidance for cooler selection. Again, motherboards can mess with it. If you see different numbers in practice, it's probably the motherboard.
Quote from: Slane on September 17, 2022, 20:04:04It's known that it's only the PPT (max 142 Watts for 5800X, 5900x and 5950X) that represent the REAL power usage during benchmarks or heavy loads. What his PPT on the on the 7950X during the bench?That's before you consider motherboards that try to trick CPUs into drawing more than they should. It can give them advantage in motherboard benchmarks. And it complicates CPU benchmarks as you really have to know what you're doing to ensure that the motherboard behaves. Dilettantes need not apply.
Quote from: NikoB on September 16, 2022, 22:02:30I predict that everything will end up with governments forcibly limiting the TDP race.AMD's TDP is largely meaningless. And a big factor here is always a motherboard. There is a natural limit as high TDPs require more exotic cooling and there is limited apetite for that. Datacentres are a different story and we could see a migration towards ever higher densities and liquid cooling. In practice, power supply can be more limiting than cooling.
QuoteFor lovers of percentage differences, this places the AMD Ryzen 9 7950X an acceptable +9.82% ahead of its predecessor.