cross-posted from: https://lemmy.world/post/2149490
In January I replaced my 5 year old GTX 1080 Ti with an Asus ROG TUF OC 4090. My old 1080 Ti never had an official waterblock made for it by anyone, so I was never able to incorporate it into my loop. I made sure that whatever model of 4090 I got, it had to have waterblock support from more than just one vendor. I’m finally done with my system. For now anyways. After years of tweaking, upgrades, and loop rebuilds, I’m happy with how it looks, and how it performs.
Specs
- Case: Lian Li O11 Dynamic XL
- CPU: AMD Ryzen 7 5800X3D
- Motherboard: Gigabyte Aorus X570 Master
- RAM: Corsair Vengeance Pro RGB (4 x 8GB)
- GPU: Asus ROG TUF OC 4090
- NVMe #1 - 1TB Western Digital Black SN850 (OS & Applications)
- NVMe #2 - 2TB Western Digital Black SN850X (Steam Library)
- Corsair Hydro X D5 Pump
- Alphacool Strix/TUF 4090 Block
- Optimus PC Foundation AM4 CPU Block
- 2 x Alphacool NexXxoS XT45 Full Copper 360mm Radiator
- Bitspower fittings
There’s a good chance however that next year when the Ryzen 8000 chips come out I’ll upgrade my platform to that. But for now I can finally enjoy the months of hard work and waiting for parts.
It’s always odd to see a custom loop setup with AMD parts. Like driving a Ferrari with a Honda engine. Nothing against AMD (or Honda for that matter) but it has been pretty consistently the budget-friendly option. Juxtaposed against the cost of all that a custom loop requires, it just seems odd. Was there a particular rationale for going with the 5800X3D? No offense intended; you’ve got a really great build!
If you’re shopping in the RTX4080 price range, the AMD equivalent has more performance in gaming so long as you don’t use ray tracing. They just don’t have an RTX4090 equivalent, so a more accurate analogy would be putting a corvette engine in a ferrari