So now they will have better possibilities to develop their own RTX 2070 Super Graphics Card with better cooling, better VRM circiut and may be faster vRam giving higher performance.īut nVidea didn't give them much time to do it. Other rumors are saying that for the RTX 2070 Super do nVidea not force the Graphics Card manufactures to buy VRM and vRam together with the RTX 2070 Super chips from nVidea. Rumors on the internet are saying that the first review for RTX 2070 Super versions coming from the Graphics Card manufactures first will be publish on July 9th. 'All of the publish RTX 2070 Super reviews, are for the nVidea reference versions. Here is a link to Corsair MP600 Solid State Drives with PCIe 4.0īut I have not yet had the time, to look into how good it will be for Resolve.Īnd for Graphics Cards will I copy, what I wrote in an another thread: But I also understand that somewhere you also have to look at the price. I think that there are better brands out there. SSD storage is an area where we really will see performance increase with PCIe ver 4.0 motherboards. But I will suggest that you at least find out how much faster ram will cost. I don't know how much faster RAM will cost in your country.
If You want a PC for both Resolve and gaming can you instead look at:ĪSUS ROG Crosshair VIII Hero witch is a X570 motherboard:Įlse will I suggest you look at 'Choosing The Right X570 Motherboard': Or have you just watched a lot of YouTube from games? It Is a game oriented motherboard. Do you expect to also use it for a lot of Gaming? I am sure you selected a great CPU.īut I wonder why you chooses the Asus - ROG Crosshair VII Hero X470 motherboard. Shotbyshaun wrote:CPU: AMD - Ryzen 9 3900X 3.8 GHz 12-Core Processorįirst congratulation. Shotbyshaun wrote:Following the previous great advice I've read various articles, watched a ton of YouTube videos and arrived at the following spec: I picked the Crosshair VII because many commentators suggest that a good x470 or B450 board is still a sweet spot, however, pcpartpicker says the 3900X and Crosshair VII are incompatible. The question I keep asking myself is: "While reducing the budget would help on cost, would the performance hit be worth it?" I understand that I could come closer to a £1500 budget by swapping the 3900X for a 3700X and swapping the video card for a Vega56. Video Card: EVGA - GeForce RTX 2070 SUPER 8 GB XC GAMING Video Card or 5700 XTĬase: Fractal Design - Meshify C ATX Mid Tower Case Storage: Corsair - MP510 960 GB M.2-2280 Solid State Drive (Scratch) Storage: Corsair - MP510 960 GB M.2-2280 Solid State Drive (System) Memory: Corsair - Vengeance LPX 32 GB (2 x 16 GB) DDR4-3200 Memory Motherboard: Asus - ROG Crosshair VII Hero ATX AM4 Motherboard Following the previous great advice I've read various articles, watched a ton of YouTube videos and arrived at the following spec:ĬPU: AMD - Ryzen 9 3900X 3.8 GHz 12-Core Processor