If you're running most of the cores at load for an extended period of time, you'll see the multipliers start to come down towards 4.0GHz as you approach all-core load. That'll go a long way in making things work on crappy VRMs, as the chip will hold back its multipliers as the load spreads to more cores, to keep itself in check in the rough ballpark of its rated TDP. Ideally, you would want a board with better power delivery as long as there are no limitations holding you to mATX.Īll I can say is that with how Ryzen 3000 is, you'll most likely be leaving it on stock boost settings and letting the chip (which is smart enough to) think for itself. There are many, many PowIRstage/Smart Power Stage-clad mini-ITX and ATX boards that will laugh at any of the mATX offerings, but they are also many times more expensive. Find one with the most true/doubled phases and a big heatsink, and put lots of airflow on has 3900X on a X570M Pro4 and can tell you all about it. Bargain basement, cost cutting, mediocrity at best. Honestly, mATX AM4 power delivery is exactly the same as mATX AM3/AM3+ power delivery.
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