APC Australia

Build your own Ryzen PC

Budget? No, it’s certainly not that — this is our AMD-powered, plug-and-play, rendering titan from Zak Storey.

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We’ve gone a little AMD mad this issue, as you can probably tell. The plucky underdog has really rattled the cages of the establishm­ent. And, yes, although there are bugs — slowly being ironed out by developers and OS engineers alike — the value propositio­n put forward by AMD’s new line-up of 7-series chips opens a whole plethora of new opportunit­ies for those looking to supercharg­e their HEDT experience.

But first, let’s get one thing straight: This is, by no means, a cheap build. Coming in at almost $7,400, this system holds nothing back when it comes to part selection, particular­ly on the storage front. Slapping 64GB of high-spec DDR4, 22TB of storage and an external NAS together bumps the price up by a staggering $4,308, accounting for an incredible 58% of the total expense. Selecting 32GB of 2,400MT/s DDR4, a 250GB PCIe SSD and two 2TB HDDs instead would drop the price significan­tly, bringing it down to a far more reasonable place for a high-end rendering station.

That said, as far as computatio­nal performanc­e goes, and value per dollar, the core spec of this build is impressive, to say the least, smashing almost all of our system benchmarks, and hammering our zero-point system into the ground. With Ryzen’s eight-core processors now cheaper than some of Intel’s four-core Kaby Lake offerings, this could mark the beginning of the end for mainstream quad-core systems...

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