Meet the World's Fastest PC: The new HP Z6 G5A Workstation
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- Опубліковано 13 гру 2023
- A non-sponsored look at the new fastest desktop PC CPU available, the Ryzen Threadripper Pro 7995WX in the HP Z6 G5A workstation. Benchmarks, multiple copies of Doom, compiling Chrome, and much more. amzn.to/3tQQtDv
All opinions expressed in this video are my own only! For the actual Pulsejet Rocket Man, check out • Crazy Rocketman: Ridin... - Наука та технологія
I was just drooling over one these HP Z6's. I just found your channel and am enjoying it. I got hooked from the task manager video.
We met in about 1999 at MS HQ. I had a substantial Solaris install base, and MS was trying to talk me into going to Server NT. You and several of your team members were doing dog and pony for a group of us customers. We had a long and interesting discussion about wolf pack clustering.
"But Can It Run Crysis?" you know someone had to ask sooner of later. lol
I just upgraded my FX6350 to a Ryzen 5 2400G (32GB ram) and NVMe drive. Faster and uses less electricity at peak than my old system at idle, so will pay for itself. Must say the leap from SATA to NVMe is amazing, even with SATA SSD, it's just wow.
I look forward to owning one of these HP systems in....7-10 years time when they are affordable third-hand budget to me.
Always much cheaper to assemble your own power rig. Often higher quality too.
@@paulmichaelfreedman8334 Just to get standard power supply connectors and replacements would be one aspect when it comes to this level and fair consideration for second hand buys.
However not always cheaper on some options and look at xeon workstations that can be had for few hundred. just to get a motherboard would cost you near that at best in some cpu's, so a whole package, can work out. just case of maintenance and yes, the branded HP's and IBM workstation level kit is not renowned for its consumer overclocking level abilities. So there will always be some meat left on the bone with those, but that makes them more robust lifewise and why second-hand if they ain't broke by now, fair game consideration for those budgets.
Former FX8350 user, the Ryzen 5 is nice! I'm rocking the Ryzen 7 2700.
@@zzco Oh yeah. I know both. When I upgraded the FX system I thought I don't really need it, but wanted more cores and threads. 2700X was a rock. But only after tried an 1500X like a middleware until completion of setup. So to say, went for the cheap, before decided to dream about the 2700X. It was an X470 Mb., so both cpu's shoved me incredible performance upgrades after the FX. I first fell in love in the 1500X. It's still have an active place, as the low budget modern system on a B450 Mb.! Absolutely love it. After the 2700X anything is a luxury. Well, not, but still.
At the moment a 5700U is much better value for money, and comes with a faster integrated GPU to boot.
i wish every youtuber was as amazing of a narrator as you! so glad i stumbled across your channel, i LOVE LOVE LOVE your videos! thank you so much for taking the time to make them!
Interesting video Dave, as always! Hey I was thinking, how about if you create a video talking about your journey through different compilers: how the compilers for windows work(ed) vs the compilers for mainstream use, how they evolved during your years in Microsoft, compile times for big large projects in the past vs now, which ones you like/dislike the most and what you use and like today... I think a video like that would be great!
It's actually been years since I have watched a video dedicated to the top-of-the-line new PC -- You did not disappoint! Thanks for the fun show-and-tell for this awesome machine. I am one of those users who rides the back of the tech wave, building my PC's out of parts that local shops and friends have lying around just before they go to the recycle shop. I am running Nobara Linux on an old 4th gen i5, and looking at upgrading to an i7 next year 🙂 Legacy gaming is my favorite use of the old PC's I have. I wish you the best in your exploits and endeavors in software development.
Great video. Amazing processing chip. I think building one of those rocket sleds in your thumbnail pic would be great fun too ... Cheers ...
My guess as to the problem is that you are bandwidth limited, and are hitting increased core-to-core latency, and have saturated the shared L3 cache, which will grow worse when adding more memory.
hang on a second,... are you saying there's such a thing as too much RAM... explain please!!!!
Makes sense. I am now thinking about whether there is a way to measure cache misses on the CPU.
@@ACCPhil Maybe intel vtune profiler can do it on intel CPUs with virtualization turned off and special driver for Windows. I can't recall, I have AMD last two years.
@@mqcapps Yes. It depends heavily on the workload. It's not just how much RAM you need. It's also about the IOPS rate. Very high RAM IOPS workloads can bottleneck bandwidth and saturate the cache more quickly. Compilation is a high IOPS workload. It's also a very common problem that higher amount of RAM slow down RAM access due to motherboard limitations. I've seen it numerous times.
@@mwdiers makes sense thanks
What a beast of a machine, Dave! Very tempted to look into a Threadripper for my next build even if I don't code compile like you do.
I love all the vintage tech you have collected. Like that land-line telephone, it's good to see someone is still preserving this technology.
Fantastic work as always. Thanks for such wonderful content Dave!
Hi Dave, great demonstration and explanation of the new system. It's a bit more than I would ever need, but it's great to get this info from you. See you next time. Take care!
Be sure to check the SPD and memory timings on those bigger modules. It might default to lower specs, and you would have to explicitly select the right one in the BIOS (XMP/EXPO)
For some reason the SPD page was blank with both configs!
@@DavesGarage that's weird. Does a tool like CPU-Z show anything on actual speed/SPD configuration?
Also be aware that the HP workstation might not support XMP profiles and defaults to the fastest JDEC profile. Because of the increased voltage in XMP profiles, they are essentially letting your BIOS automatically overclock your memory. I ran into his problem with an HP Z2 workstation with an i7 10700k where I upgraded the memory and noticed it clocking according to the fastest JDEC profile instead of the XMP profile. There's no way to change this anywhere from BIOS or software.
Super slick narration from your side as always! Happy holidays, greetings and kind regards from Southern Bavaria (where the cars on the autobahn are faster than most peoples brains)
That was a really well produced video!
Well written and delivered, informative and engaging. Thanks, Dave :)
Hilarious that you have a 1990s era phone on the wall in that hi tech office. Love it.
Maybe more RAM doesn't help if you already had hit the bandwidth bottleneck to the RAM.
Anyway, impressive compile performance. I was reminded by when I got my hands on a SGI Onyx for the first time and tried to compile stuff. Instead on spending ~10 sec per file as my PC would need at that time, it was more like 10 files per sec instead. I was blown away. But now 30 years later, if Moore still applies, things should be log2(15) or about 32,000 times faster.
Great video as always. All that is missing is the gemstone chalice
They say jealousy is a vice, but after watching your review of the Threadripper Pro 7995WX, I can't help but turn a shade of envious green (I mean team red)! 😅
Seriously, your review was as epic as the processor itself. Kudos for giving us the lowdown on this beast. Keep rocking those reviews, and I'll keep battling my 'extreme tech jealousy' over here!
Dave's juggling with antique typewriter style machines one day and top of the line Godzillas another, amazing !
I'm loving the "colored visual awesomeness"! 2:00
The god of LED's right here!
Always ahead of the curve....Love you incite. Keep up the good work...
Were your 8 x 5600 sticks running at 5600? Or, did they fall back to base clock at 4800? Most memory kits I've seen don't have EXPO profiles yet, with the exception of some G.Skill and Kingston RDIMMs. That said, I know some Sapphire Rapids kits should technically work with TR 7000, even without EXPO, but haven't been able to do any testing yet.
I do not know why, but I love your outros. I will say this, this generation of threadripper is pretty awesome.
It is great to see you review this :). I feel strange as I ditched the HEDT platform for the first time since the x58 days in exchange for a consumer grade system. But for me I am drifting away from a super system that does everything to a mix of servers and consumer equipment that is tailored for each task. My two servers both hold 96cores/192threads and a TB of ram while my "main rig" holds a mere 16cores/32threads and 64gigs of ram. So all my renders are run on a server now and my gaming lives of the consumer system. Part of me misses the do anything nature of the threadripper system but the rational part says I built a faster gaming system for a tenth of the cost.
Makes me want to upgrade. Thanks for the breakdown. 😊
Performance levels that mere mortals like me can only dream about. Thank you for giving us some insights into that incredible speed demon of a workstation!
Dave, Great video as always. Fan of the task manager from NT3.1-4(always open) you know! Studied electric engineering- just built a 24C/32T I9 13900K-W/RT4080-128GB (before I7-6600K) big jump- in the process of building another WS w/AMD 7950X3D 16C/32T - for ML (Bible study - Ancient Hebrew code)
What an awesome content! Benchmark baseline for future references!
Merry Christmas Dave ✌️
It'd be interesting to compare it at an equal package power limit to your older Threadripper.
Love all the videos about Windows. Clearly it holds a place in your heart - as it does mine. Have you ever talked about the future of Windows and the areas of particular concern for you? Would love to hear your perspective.
I'm pretty happy with Windows 11, and especially love Hyper-V and WSL2, so I think they're on a pretty good trajectory. I don't agree with every decision and wish the desktop wasn't for rent to advertisers, but otherwise, I'm pretty content with current Windows!
matching ddr5 modules is a gamble. I think even if they are individually rated for certain timings, they might have problems when you use more of them together, I have had the same experience as you but relaxing the timings helped. I don't know why it straight out doesn't crash, maybe the on die ECC has something to do with it?
Amazing video as always!
"Somewhere Between Yes With A Butt And No With A Unless" That Line Is Gold.
Bad ass machine! Thanks Dave!
Hey Dave, noticed you added some modified car lingo - are you an enthusiast? Would love to see a video if you have any project cars/forever cars you own.
Try making a 20,480x20,480 pixel Mandelbulb(er) deep zoom & fly through animation. That should put the latest Thread Ripper through its paces :)
Hi Dave! Love your channel. Would you be open to taking custom benchmarks from fans? Wouldn’t have the project ready until next month, so you’d have some time to think about it.
Your "old" PC is by no means outdated. 3 years is not old. By most people's standards, that is still considered a modern, high end and very powerful productivity desktop. If I had that PC at home (or at work even), I honestly wouldn't know what to do with that much power. I'm not being judgmental, it's just interesting to hear specs like that being kind of classified as old or venerable. My main driver at home is still running a Haswell generation CPU and GTX 970 🤣
Anyway, love the channel and I find a lot of your video topics to be informative and different than the content I see on a lot of other tech channels. Keep them coming.
Do you happen to have captured the wattage to the power supply, for some of your scenarios? There is a subset of your audience whose interests include various efficiencies.
I have an old PC running the latest Debian release and shell only it barely runs ``cmatrix`` at approximately 5 frames (?) per second. It's an Athlon 1GHz from around my birth year.
Most of the caps are are bloated, although none burst yet and they still work.
I will build my next workstation in the MASSIVE steel tower it's in. I'll have to modify the front panel to allow for some stealthy air intakes. Ideally I would like to put a USB 3.5" floppy drive inside but I'll have to see if I can fit that behind the front panel. I do have a USB 1.0 PCIe card that has an internal standard female connector (not a header, a proper connector), so that should work. Since the front IO is at 1999-2001 standards I'll probably have to use a USB-c dock connected to the rear IO for any high-speed-IO, but it will look really nice. The best part is that it has no rust anywhere despite it's age and less than perfect storage conditions.
From an end-user perspective, the HP Z-class workstations are OUTSTANDING! Very well built; the airflow pathing is well intentioned, and service is a dream with a near tool-less chassis. Of course that comes at the sacrifice of weight: the chassis is HEAVY, and somewhat cumbersome. The Z6 chassis is doable by a single person, though the Z8 dual-socket workstation is more easily carried by two people. These are effectively servers in a desktop chassis, and should be able to handle any workload thrown at them.. as long as you can suffer the price :)
@Dave's Garage Did the computer come with open ram slots? ddr5 runs slower when fully populated by a significant margin. For example, my motherboard has four slots but if i use all four of them, the speed froms from 5200 to 4200. Ryzens are incredibly dependent on memory bandwidth so that might be the issue. You might also consider you have 96 actual cores no 192 so using hyperthreading when you're maxing out a core anyway will simply slow it down. I would expect your absolute fastest result would be testing 96 instances.
Thanks Again! Good Job!
I love my Z servers. I’ve got a dual Xeon and it’s awesome. Great value when buying older machines.
Dave could you please tell me what some of your display lights are. You have so many cool lights and im a lava lamp/cool light stuff type of dude. Thanks for the amazing vids
I like the choice of a plasma display for the 'neon' sign.
To me the chromium test seems to indicate that no matter how much muscle you throw at it you've passed a process efficiency limit, which is no the case for example with 3d rendering where you can split in chunks the task easily. Maybe using 2 vms with that platform for compiling purposes (linux and windows versions in parallel?) would probably get more stuff done faster.
Yes likely running 4 concurrent versions of Windows, with each hitting 256 chromium windows will work, as that will at least move the bottleneck from the Windows screen display to another point, likely memory bandwidth, or just the bandwidth to communicate with the graphics system alone. At least should be easy to do, given the 128G base, and split it into 4 31G VM's and 4G for the hypervisor, and 4 separate displays on the video side.
The time difference could be a difference in tertiary timing between the kits. If you didn't validate ALL the timing of both sets of installed memory then it's impossible to say they were the "same". The time difference is a little less than 3% if my math is correct which could be explained by that.
Next when I'm looking at the compiles taking place I'm looking at the number of tasks running, where numbers are simply flashing very fast but both seem to be about the same. If the compiler allows for 192 threads I don't understand why that would be the same, so is it possible you hit a limit in some software when you were compiling?
I’m interested in a large CFD, NASTRAN, etc., large matrix oriented engineering problem or a large wireframe animation problem??
Great video!
I once saw a video where you talked about your home network. Do you have your equipment list? Could you do a video a top-notch home network?
Can you bench mark LLama 70 B and Falcon 180 B maybe 4 bit quants on cpu ? it may saturate the 8 channel memory. To use oobabooga textgen web ui is simple to install and use.
Dave seems smart. I subscribed.
Hi Dave. Do you have a page or anything where you upload your different LED projects? I do electronic repairs (PS, Xbox etc.) and am interested in learning projects like that, but would be nice to have a decent page to reference from someone who takes pride in their projects, like you do :)
HP rocks, my z620 is still cranking, watching this video on it. I love their workstations and gaming pc's, at work we used hp and dell and hp was way nicer on the workstations and servers.
That was interesting Dave. I’m writing a software platform that should be able to drive that hardware to its limits. Hopefully I can find an investor to speed things along.
Dave, a man can only play Solitaire so fast 😉
But now you can play 192 games at once :-)
As the previous guys stated. it sounds like it might be a bandwidth isssue with the memory and might be overloading the memory controler on the cpu ....increasing voltatage to the memory as well as the cpu package might give better numbers ? but i would assume you would have noticed that ....just figured i'd throw it out there. thanks
Hi Dave, can we have a story about how the start menu left in windows 8, and how you felt since you wrote the first one
The main reason memory speed drops when all slots are filled is that the doubled I/O buss loads require more time for the transmitter outputs to charge/discharge the lines. My source: read any motherboard manual.
I like the neon sign t 1:06. I'd make that the icon for the channel.
Watching this on an HP Z5 workstation of 2015, which has been running fine and dandy almost H24. It sports only a i7-4770@3.40GHz and a GTX1070, it also lacks wi-fi and USB-C, but otherwise, it's a workhorse. Still good enough to play DCS !
take a look at the memory speed & timings might be set to stock or slower might enable doc/xmp
Were the replacement RAM sticks the same CAS latency? Do they have XMPP/is it on? Finally, is Fritz the one I know who was in TwC and went to ZDI?
Those LEDs are a nightmare! Otherwise great vid.
Dayum boi, where'd ya find this.
- You could've tried running LZDoom, it's specifically meant to be low-impact.
- 8:40 It's amusing to see the hundreds of copies running the demo-mode like that; it looked like a trace of the video, each one showing it a few frames behind the one before it, almost like a hung-window ghosting.
- 11:07 The RAM issue sounds familiar, I'm sure I've heard about something like that in the past, maybe in an LTT video or something about larger RAM modules being slower because of addressing or something. 🤔
very informative
Great video
That is one badass machine!!
Thanks for all your hard work. I'm very jealous
Thanks for another great video. Could you please tell us the name of the song you play in the video intro?
I believe it's called "Maybe you try it"
Thanks Dave. Keep up the good work.@@DavesGarage
1. Take care with overclocking of new AMD CPU's. The last non-Threadripper generation is (was) very intollerant for to much voltage. There was melting of CPU die's and cavities in the silicone of AMD 7xxx CPUs. Don't know if this also applies to Threadrippers. It seamed to be connected with the heat transfer method's inside the die.
2. maybe a sorting algorithm is a bottleneck during compilation? changing a sorting algorithm had significant impact on boot time in freebsd 14.0.
Dave's can we run AI on older PC chips? In my hiarachial data base days it to one million instructions to do a database transaction. How much for AI? And can drones be flown with older PC chips? Am I correct thinking we can write AI now because we figured out how to write AI code?
Could we we have have written the code in ALC or BASIC if we had known how? Thanks
Is the ram somehow blocking itself? If you have 128GB on 8 slots its 16GB per slot. 384 is 48GB per slot. Does some of the RAM access have to wait for time on the pins?
I can't find this one on the HP site (only the 7955WX and 7945WX with max 32GB are there). I was curious how pricing compared to Dell, which now has the full line up, incl 7995WX on Zen4 and I'm considering getting the 7985WX or 7975WX.
SKU 9J2K8UT and SKU 9J2K7U
Now that we are finally approaching shrinking limits of ICs, I'm excited to see more and more software learn to thread across cores to get better use of this wider architecture!
I was about to say before you got to it is two rank adding latency before you proposed a similar theory I wonder if you split up the memory in a vm if you would have different results
I love the fact that Dave still rocks that beautiful Lian Li case. Having one myself makes me proud of my choice.
Can't beat it!
I was waiting for someone to couple RGB to CPU/GPU temp! I'm not an RGB fan, as I'm usually looking at my monitor, so I'd rather sink money into practical hardware sans RGB, it's usually cheaper and identical especially when looking at the monitor! Of course numbers are better, but for a quick glance reference, I like it!
Corsair iCue does this out the box for a while now. Not sure about other fan software but it’s not exactly revolutionary.
@@o0Donuts0o I guess I never looked or noticed until now!
This is a machine that you get to keep for at least a decade as a daily driver, if not forever and still can sell years later at a good price. I still have my now vintage $10,000 dual P III Tualatin workstation from 2001. Works even better with SSD and other upgrades, albeit for retro computing. It paid for itself many times over. So this TR monster belongs to the same category
What a gentleman. Thank You.
what are your plans with the old PC? Im in the market for a new computer. atleast new to me that will run win 11 so i can continue with adobe. in my creative field. and do some ai gen work.
All that RGB would drive me absolutely bonkers 😵💫
quick note: piping data to-screen slows down the process. you may have timed this without to-screen output, but just in case you didn't give that a shot and let us know if there's any difference.
I was at the launch in Also Expo and didn't know the cost of the demo unit when I was litterally poking at it.. the rep laughed when he told me the price mid poke.
you made me love rgb lights
I was in a webinar seeing these products be revealed.
Wow, that thing is a beast.
I'm glad this guy exist. this guy has several videos that should have been posted in the 90s, but its all interesting enough. "excluding this video". I*m going to go open up vb6 basics right quick and go code a yahoo booter
How do you cool the CPU with LHe if it flashes off faster than it can absorb heat above like -77k?
that CPM drive.. I rememer have an 8250 and a 9060 and 3 SFD1001's on an C75 BBS back in the day..
Your desk is awesome.
Takes tons of money, which Dave has.
there are timing optimizations for 16gb sticks.
curious…. what was your numa config ?
interesting, i guess that's why the distributed key-value store I've been using (tikv) requires installation of numactl so it must do some optimizations based on installed memory
OMG dave i have a desktop fireplace too that i made out of my old nexus 6. I just use to to run a fireplace and collect brave BAT tokens
I feel like the computer the universe runs on is faster
Barely
Of course, it's quantum.
it is...
it's called your mind
No, we all are running on Dave's computer.
And where does the univere "run" in? Lets say in a "shell". Where is this shell located? The Universe and beyond is endless. The only explenation is God imo and my romantic wish, as an aftelife in heaven sounds something to look forward to.
The fact your compile was slower with later memory sticks is a coincidence with something I saw about a month ago recommending laptop users to not go above 16GB memory per stick because they claim it would actually be slower. This tells me the bottleneck isn't in the memory or the motherboard, but the internal memory management. Something about the architecture isn't keeping up with the size of memory. Is some kind of hardware swapping happening perhaps?
That's pretty good, considering my first PC ran an Intel 8080 at 2MHz, ca. 1978. 😅
"Calm blue state" - Strobes in chase squence