Question Is 130-160W idle normal for my build? (7950 X3D + X670-E + 7900 XT)

Nov 15, 2024
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I've put together a new build, and while I'm happy with the performance - I've noticed it draws a lot of power at the plug. When doing absolutely nothing, it draws 130W. Browsing the internet or running a youtube video brings it up to 160W. Coming from a Intel build that draws about 60-90W, this seems like a lot.

Is there anything I could do to reduce power consumption? I've already put Windows into the power saver plan and turned off the onboard audio and iGPU.

Normally, I wouldn't be too worried, but I'm on my PC working on excel spreadsheets and browsing for 12 hours a day. In California, I'd be paying over $200 a year just to do that on my gaming PC. At that rate, it would actually make financial sense for me to have a separate low power PC just for those tasks, leaving the gaming PC for just gaming.

CPU: AMD 7950 X3D
Motherboard: MSI X670-E Tomahawk Wifi
GPU: 7900 XT
RAM: 2x16GB G.Skill 6000 Mhz
 
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Eximo

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Do you have multiple monitors?

A common problem with the 7000 series GPUs is that they stay boosted when you have multiple monitors. You might actually be better off turning the iGPU back on and putting as many monitors on it is possible to get your discrete GPU down to one display.

Ryzen CPUs also have a need to keep at least two chiplets running at all times, the I/O die and at least one CCD, so the idle power draw on the CPU is basically doubled over Intel's monolithic CPUs.

Would also depend on the number of fans/pumps and drives you have what is considered normal.

Another power saving measure would be getting a 220V outlet run to where your desktop is. The higher voltage will make the PSU more efficient. You could also look into getting an 80+ Titanium rated PSU to save a little bit more.
 

Misgar

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Mar 2, 2023
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When doing absolutely nothing, it draws 130W.
Sounds similar to my 7950X, but I have 64GB RAM, 3 x M.2 NVMe, 1 x SATA SSD, 5 x hard disks and an RTX 3060.

When it's finished running a 9 hour video transcode I'll measure the idle power.

Another power saving measure would be getting a 220V outlet
I'm paying the equivalent of $0.37 per kWhr for a 240V AC 50Hz supply. Not sure if that is more or less than the price of electricity in California.

it would actually make financial sense for me to have a separate low power PC just for those tasks,
I use an old Pentium G3258 dual core system in the morning for browsing. Considerably less power consumption.

You could pick up an old low power Dell or HP office PC for very little. I bought a small Dell system complete with monitor, keyboard and mouse for $25.

A low power NUC would be much faster and use even less power, but cost considerably more.
 
Nov 15, 2024
4
0
10
Do you have multiple monitors?

A common problem with the 7000 series GPUs is that they stay boosted when you have multiple monitors. You might actually be better off turning the iGPU back on and putting as many monitors on it is possible to get your discrete GPU down to one display.

Ryzen CPUs also have a need to keep at least two chiplets running at all times, the I/O die and at least one CCD, so the idle power draw on the CPU is basically doubled over Intel's monolithic CPUs.

Would also depend on the number of fans/pumps and drives you have what is considered normal.

Another power saving measure would be getting a 220V outlet run to where your desktop is. The higher voltage will make the PSU more efficient. You could also look into getting an 80+ Titanium rated PSU to save a little bit more.
I do have multiple monitors. I'll definitely give the iGPU thing a shot - especially since I only ever game on one display. Do you happen to know if should leave hybrid graphics on or off for that?

Yeah, I'm aware of the chiplet design thing now. It seems like a lot of the draw is actually coming from the motherboard. CPU reads 15-20W, CPU package is at 50W, and the GPU sits at about 33-45W.

The cooling set up was recycled from my last build, and the build is already pretty much passively cooled at idle. I'm going to try dropping a couple SSD's off the system to see how it acts.

Unfortunately a 220V outlet isn't an option - I rent. I'm currently on a a 80+ Gold PSU, and the calculations are showing that I'd only really save 5W ($7-20 ~ a year?) for a $200+ investment.
 
Nov 15, 2024
4
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Sounds similar to my 7950X, but I have 64GB RAM, 3 x M.2 NVMe, 1 x SATA SSD, 5 x hard disks and an RTX 3060.

When it's finished running a 9 hour video transcode I'll measure the idle power.


I'm paying the equivalent of $0.37 per kWhr for a 240V AC 50Hz supply. Not sure if that is more or less than the price of electricity in California.


I use an old Pentium G3258 dual core system in the morning for browsing. Considerably less power consumption.

You could pick up an old low power Dell or HP office PC for very little. I bought a small Dell system complete with monitor, keyboard and mouse for $25.

A low power NUC would be much faster and use even less power, but cost considerably more.
I'll appreciate that. If yours is lower, maybe there's a motherboard board setting I can mess around with.

I'm paying about the same per kWhr. I actually already have an old Dell SSF sitting next to me running as a proxmox server, and I'm watching it idle at 10-20W. I might end up with a 2nd one at this rate :sweatsmile:
 

Eximo

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Ambassador
Unfortunately a 220V outlet isn't an option - I rent. I'm currently on a a 80+ Gold PSU, and the calculations are showing that I'd only really save 5W ($7-20 ~ a year?) for a $200+ investment.

Yeah, that is a lot of people's situation. Also the cost to get it done professionally is likely never to be recouped.

I've thought about doing it in my house, but it would be quite a bit of work.

A secondary system is how I deal with it. An i3-12100F and an Intel A380 (though if I really wanted savings, I would just get a CPU with the iGPU and use that. Maybe next time.
 
Nov 15, 2024
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For those interested in the future,
I played around and measured the how different settings affect power consumption:

SettingIdle power consumption (W)Video Player power consumption (W)
EXPO on+5+25
Global C StateNegligibleNegligible
PBONegligibleNegligible
iGPU / dGPU portNegligibleNegligible
Hybrid GraphicsNegligibleNegligible
iGPU enableNegligibleNegligible
HD Audio EnableNegligible+5

So all of that was a bit of a big nothing burger. What did make a difference was going into the graphics settings and telling Windows to use the iGPU for chrome / videos, which saved 15W with no noticeable impact to performance. I'd say to just offload any non-gaming workload (discord, etc) to the iGPU as possible.

Unfortunately it looks like this is just how the build is. I'll probably end up looking into a DisplayLink Adapter so I can run everything off my laptop when I'm not gaming.