lestatdark said: My major constrain about the CPU is because i've been reading that some games are heavily CPU-bottlenecked, even at Dual/Triple GTX Titan setup (especially Crysis 3). How high can either the 3930K and the 3930X go in OC? (I'm also adding a liquid cooler, been looking into the one you have, the Corsair H100i). |
Look, regardless of what you do, you will always have a bottleneck somewhere in your system, even if you have the latest and greatest hardware available, bottlenecks can also change depending on the game you're running and certain parts of a game.
Heck at stock Ivy Bridge quad-cores can beat the Sandy-Bridge-E Hexa-cores in lightly threaded games because Ivy Bridge has a higher IPC which translates into better single threaded performance, run a game that can use 6 Cores though... Nothing can touch Sandy-Bridge-E.
But considering Socket 1155 is a fraction of the price and haswell is around the corner, some people see more value in going with socket 1155 and just replacing the motherboard and processor more often.
Also, my sig is outdated. I've just rebuilt it and upgraded some stuff and threw in a proper water cooling loop and such, but if you're settled on the Corsair H100i, expect around 4.6-4.8ghz if you win the silicon lottery, I actually bought 4x Core i7 3930K's when I first built this system last year untill I found a really good clocker that didn't mind having relatively low voltages.
If you have the right chip, motherboard, cooling... It's not unheard of to get 5ghz, but lets face it, the difference between 4.8ghz and 5ghz is worthless, especially if you have to drive up the voltages to hit that mark. :P
Also get another couple fans to put the Corsair hydro into a push/pull config and a fan controller to go with it.
Just keep in mind though. At 7680x1440. - The GPU is always, I mean always... Going to be the bottlneck, it really doesn't matter if you have an AMD Phenom 2 or a Core i7 3930K @ 5ghz, GPU's will always hold you back.
--::{PC Gaming Master Race}::--