Jow Forums help me decide between Ryzen 2600 and i7 8086k
Not a troll. I'm making a very small form factor pc with restrictive thermals, so I'll probably even have to delid the 8086k. 9th gen intel processors don't delid very well.
My other choice is just forget maxing performance & go for value. Ryzen 2600 is no hassle, pop it in the case and forget about it.
>delid for thermals in a cooling restricted scenario Are you retarded?
Cameron Long
Why go with the 2600 instead of the 2700 its about the same price as the 8086k and runs way cooler.
Ian Perry
Ryzen uses less power for everyday tasks so it'd be better for a situation like this.
Nolan Cooper
VIA
Nolan Green
What is your use case? If you want to go for gaming at 144hz and such the 8086 would be better, but you would need a beefy cooler for it, which is hard to get in an SFF case unless you go for a small AIO. The 2600 or even 2700 can do fine with an aircooler, but you will lose out on some raw performance. Personally, I have a 1700 and use it to game on a 144hz screen and I do just fine, but I can't hit the 144hz on all games so do keep that in mind. Another thing to remember is that Intel has better SFF motherboards to chose from, while AM4 is more limited, so make sure you also find which motherboard you will be pairing your CPU with before you buy.
Hunter Bennett
> I'm making a very small form factor pc with restrictive thermals Ryzen 2400G. No dedicated GPU -> much lowered power consumption.
Brody Ramirez
Alright I can see that. Now i'm wondering 2700 vs 8086
The question is now whether that 8086k single core performance is worth $200 and delidding hassle.
Jordan Lewis
Your thermals will be out of fucking control with an Intel build in SFF.
Tyler Thomas
I will make it simple for you. Will you game at 144hz? If the answer is no, then there's your answer. If the answer is yes, and you can fit a high end GPU in your SFF case, then you should consider the Intel part.
Brandon Ward
>very small form factor pc with restrictive thermals
Stupid choice. Smallfaggotry reks performance and a cubic foot or so is hardly worth that unless you live in shoebox.
Robert Anderson
I see. Ty
Gabriel Hernandez
What GPU are you planning on pairing it with? If it's something like a 1060, go Ryzen.
Jeremiah Hughes
> deciding between CPU that are like 50x as powerful as smartphones that already easily handle "everyday" tasks, only to probably augment them with another 100x the transistors on a GPU > everyday tasks Are your processing power requirements really more than not only a J5005, but also a 200GE and Ryzen 2400G?
People got no clue what kind of monstrous CPU/APU we got now.
Colton Adams
Ryzen, you'll be able to upgrade w/the same socket until 2020.
Owen Ramirez
Ryzen works better for your use case.
Jackson Young
Get 200GE, then upgrade to zen 2 without having to buy a new motherboard
Then sell 200ge, though I'd keep it as a backup CPU desu.
Mason Nguyen
This is reasonable, but I can't see why OP even has to plan to upgrade any time soon even with a 200GE.
It should be enough for typical "everyday use" for many years.
Tyler Walker
Delidding will only help to carry away the heat from the chip itself better to your heatsink. If there's only a small turd heatsink as it's normal in a very small form factor delidding will not do shit. go for a 2700, it runs by far cooler. stop using userbenchmark while you're at it. Remember ryzen needs a dedicated gpu and intel's integrated is dogshit. you would probably be fine with a 2200G/2400G
Elijah Cooper
>very small form factor pc with restrictive thermals ryzen hands down