Spent some quality time with the Ryzen 1800x this weekend.
The 1800x is particularly good at heavy multi-threaded applications (video rendering).
The 1800x is not particularly good at heavy multi-threaded applications at ultra low audio latency settings.
Loaded a dense audio stress-test (RME Fireface UFX at a 48-sample ASIO buffer size) and started the transport.
The 1800x initially seemed to be doing well.
Upon solo'ing the kick drum, there was subtly garbled audio.
This stress-test was intentionally loaded with heavy processing/effects, so I removed a bunch of plugins (thinking the load was simply too much).
Restarted the transport... and the garbled audio was still present.
Closed and reopened Sonar. The garbled audio was still preset.
When running an Intel 6850k (same exact stress-test and conditions), the audio was completely glitch-free.
Another thing to consider, the 1800x is "bleeding edge".
Motherboard choice is limited... and they're first generation with few BIOS revisions.
CPU cooler choice (currently) is limited.
Applications haven't been compiled/optimized with Ryzen architecture in mind.
While testing, I changed some settings in the X370 motherboard's BIOS
Go back into Windows and SMT (Hyper-threading in AMD speak) was gone.
Check in the BIOS... and SMT is specifically enabled.
Chalk that up to running the latest beta BIOS version.
Had to flash to the latest release version to resolve that issue.
While running Sonar Platinum:
Using Ctrl+ drag/drop PhoenixVerb caused Sonar to crash.
This is not the case when running the 6850k.
Basic use of Sonar often resulted in "General Error" messages popping up.
Again, this is not the case when running the 6850k.
While these types of issues aren't AMD's fault (and can be worked around), it makes hour-to-hour use of Sonar a pain. Ultimately, these types of "early release" issues will be resolved.
What won't change is the underlying architecture of Ryzen.
Our findings would be in complete agreement with Scan in the UK.
If you're rendering video, the 1800x smokes the 6850k.
If working at ultra low latency (audio) settings, stick with Intel.
Aside from performance, yet another consideration is advanced features.
X99 motherboards offer advanced options that just aren't available on X370 boards.
- Quad-channel RAM
- Thunderbolt-3
- U.2
- Etc