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Also, for the time being, I'm going to switch to dual booting on this machine while still also using my older workstation. So, I can either have 2 workstations doing builds or I can be doing gaming on this while also switching over regularly to test new builds on the other, etc.
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Threadripper chips are massive with massive power usage and heat spread across the huge die. They need special coolers and you need a really good one to truly take advantage of them. They bypassed chip density limits with die size. It's a massive server CPU but with high clocks.
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NH-D15 works as well as icegiantcooling.com for a more typical CPU. It's as good or perhaps even a bit better at taking away heat from a smaller, denser CPU. They only have noctua.at/en/nh-u14s-tr4 for Threadripper though and even an NH-D15 version wouldn't be enough for 64c.
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I'm guessing that AMD won't bother with higher core counts for Zen 3 even if only because there was so little interest there was in making proper coolers for the current Threadripper generation. There wasn't a single useful AIO made for it. All worse than Noctua's offering...
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The main issue with the motherboards is they needed to make newer revisions to handle the power demands of the 32/64 core chips, especially when overclocked. I had trouble finding anywhere to get any decent new revision boards, etc. It was painful. Then chip shortage...
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