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65W vs 175W Ryzen 9950X?

I recently make a post for a suitable VPS to host a minecraft server. and learn about advinservers.com. but there's a different plan for the location I need which is only 65W. How's the performance compare to the full 165W?

https://advinservers.com/cloud

Comments

  • xvpsxvps Member

    All-core frequency drops from 5 GHz to 3 GHz when you switch from 175W to 65W.

    In some or even many use cases, you might never notice the difference, but it uses significantly less power and generates much less heat.

    I guess a lot of providers could save a good amount of money by switching to 65W, but the LET drama queens will probably go ballistic when they find out.

    See: https://www.club386.com/heres-what-happens-when-you-run-an-amd-ryzen-9-9950x-at-65w/

  • emghemgh Member, Megathread Squad

    @xvps said: I guess a lot of providers could save a good amount of money by switching to 65W, but the LET drama queens will probably go ballistic when they find out.

    Could save even more by not buying that good a CPU in the first place.

  • tentortentor Member, Host Rep

    This is first time I see this feature being used for server usage

  • huge drop in multicore performance (around 50% less than full tdp)
    same single core burst

    however most providers won't give u an unlocked chip (due to thermal constraints and power consumption)

  • xvpsxvps Member

    @advinservers, how big is the performance difference between the two setups you are selling?

  • niznetniznet Member
    edited July 2025

    Oh yeah, I'm wondering this as well. At least, I felt a noticeable difference once I migrated one of my client site from an EPYC 7000 series to a Ryzen 9 9950X VPS, and it made the site run smoother.

  • advinserversadvinservers Member, Patron Provider

    @xvps said:
    @advinservers, how big is the performance difference between the two setups you are selling?

    I’ll respond to this thread with benchmarks in a little bit.

    Thanked by 1xvps
  • advinserversadvinservers Member, Patron Provider
    edited July 2025

    @tentor said:
    This is first time I see this feature being used for server usage

    The AMD EPYC 4545P is essentially an AMD Ryzen 9950X that has been set to use 65W. Instead of that, we prefer purchasing 9950X and using the Eco mode preset in the BIOS to set it to 65W.

    They perform the same as the EPYC 4545P with similar power usage. We generally prefer 9950X because availability is much better.

  • I prefer when my 9950x3d consumes 200w.

  • MikeAMikeA Member, Patron Provider

    @advinservers said:

    @tentor said:
    This is first time I see this feature being used for server usage

    The AMD EPYC 4545P is essentially an AMD Ryzen 9950X that has been set to use 65W. Instead of that, we prefer purchasing 9950X and using the Eco mode preset in the BIOS to set it to 65W.

    They perform the same as the EPYC 4545P with similar power usage. We generally prefer 9950X because availability is much better.

    you guys should've seen this man boasting about the 4545p before release then being let down. :smiley:

  • advinserversadvinservers Member, Patron Provider

    @MikeA said:

    @advinservers said:

    @tentor said:
    This is first time I see this feature being used for server usage

    The AMD EPYC 4545P is essentially an AMD Ryzen 9950X that has been set to use 65W. Instead of that, we prefer purchasing 9950X and using the Eco mode preset in the BIOS to set it to 65W.

    They perform the same as the EPYC 4545P with similar power usage. We generally prefer 9950X because availability is much better.

    you guys should've seen this man boasting about the 4545p before release then being let down. :smiley:

    4545P???!!!!??!?

  • mwmw Member
    root@x:~# curl -sL https://yabs.sh | bash
    # ## ## ## ## ## ## ## ## ## ## ## ## ## ## ## ## ## #
    #              Yet-Another-Bench-Script              #
    #                     v2025-04-20                    #
    # https://github.com/masonr/yet-another-bench-script #
    # ## ## ## ## ## ## ## ## ## ## ## ## ## ## ## ## ## #
    
    Sat Jul 19 02:02:17 PM UTC 2025
    
    Basic System Information:
    ---------------------------------
    Uptime     : 9 days, 15 hours, 45 minutes
    Processor  : AMD Ryzen 9 9950X 16-Core Processor
    CPU cores  : 2 @ 4291.912 MHz
    AES-NI     : ✔ Enabled
    VM-x/AMD-V : ✔ Enabled
    RAM        : 7.8 GiB
    Swap       : 0.0 KiB
    Disk       : 234.3 GiB
    Distro     : Debian GNU/Linux 12 (bookworm)
    Kernel     : 6.1.0-22-amd64
    VM Type    : KVM
    IPv4/IPv6  : ✔ Online / ✔ Online
    
    IPv6 Network Information:
    ---------------------------------
    ISP        : Advin Services LLC
    ASN        : AS206216 Advin Services LLC
    Host       : Advin Services LLC
    Location   : Singapore, Central Singapore (01)
    Country    : Singapore
    
    fio Disk Speed Tests (Mixed R/W 50/50) (Partition /dev/sda3):
    ---------------------------------
    Block Size | 4k            (IOPS) | 64k           (IOPS)
      ------   | ---            ----  | ----           ---- 
    Read       | 348.89 MB/s  (87.2k) | 1.48 GB/s    (23.2k)
    Write      | 349.81 MB/s  (87.4k) | 1.49 GB/s    (23.4k)
    Total      | 698.70 MB/s (174.6k) | 2.98 GB/s    (46.6k)
               |                      |                     
    Block Size | 512k          (IOPS) | 1m            (IOPS)
      ------   | ---            ----  | ----           ---- 
    Read       | 1.65 GB/s     (3.2k) | 1.59 GB/s     (1.5k)
    Write      | 1.74 GB/s     (3.4k) | 1.69 GB/s     (1.6k)
    Total      | 3.40 GB/s     (6.6k) | 3.28 GB/s     (3.2k)
    
    iperf3 Network Speed Tests (IPv4):
    ---------------------------------
    Provider        | Location (Link)           | Send Speed      | Recv Speed      | Ping           
    -----           | -----                     | ----            | ----            | ----           
    Clouvider       | London, UK (10G)          | 1.10 Gbits/sec  | 437 Mbits/sec   | 158 ms         
    Eranium         | Amsterdam, NL (100G)      | 4.37 Gbits/sec  | 5.44 Gbits/sec  | 169 ms         
    Uztelecom       | Tashkent, UZ (10G)        | 4.49 Gbits/sec  | 2.09 Gbits/sec  | 181 ms         
    Leaseweb        | Singapore, SG (10G)       | 2.78 Gbits/sec  | 2.39 Gbits/sec  | 2.14 ms        
    Clouvider       | Los Angeles, CA, US (10G) | busy            | busy            | 175 ms         
    Leaseweb        | NYC, NY, US (10G)         | 3.35 Gbits/sec  | 1.32 Gbits/sec  | 238 ms         
    Edgoo           | Sao Paulo, BR (1G)        | 843 Mbits/sec   | 1.70 Gbits/sec  | 372 ms         
    
    iperf3 Network Speed Tests (IPv6):
    ---------------------------------
    Provider        | Location (Link)           | Send Speed      | Recv Speed      | Ping           
    -----           | -----                     | ----            | ----            | ----           
    Clouvider       | London, UK (10G)          | 1.05 Gbits/sec  | 955 Mbits/sec   | 157 ms         
    Eranium         | Amsterdam, NL (100G)      | 4.29 Gbits/sec  | 4.75 Gbits/sec  | 170 ms         
    Uztelecom       | Tashkent, UZ (10G)        | 4.45 Gbits/sec  | 2.10 Gbits/sec  | 181 ms         
    Leaseweb        | Singapore, SG (10G)       | 8.56 Gbits/sec  | 5.78 Gbits/sec  | --             
    Clouvider       | Los Angeles, CA, US (10G) | 893 Mbits/sec   | 690 Mbits/sec   | 175 ms         
    Leaseweb        | NYC, NY, US (10G)         | 3.13 Gbits/sec  | 2.06 Gbits/sec  | 238 ms         
    Edgoo           | Sao Paulo, BR (1G)        | busy            | 1.86 Gbits/sec  | 373 ms         
    
    Geekbench 6 Benchmark Test:
    ---------------------------------
    Test            | Value                         
                    |                               
    Single Core     | 2277                          
    Multi Core      | 3658                          
    Full Test       | https://browser.geekbench.com/v6/cpu/12929882
    
    YABS completed in 14 min 18 sec
    
    Thanked by 1Advin
  • nvmenvme Member

    What’s the point of getting the 9950X then? Those benchmarks can be pretty misleading. There’s a noticeable dip in single-core performance, and the multi-core results are underwhelming. Plus, try running benchmarks on a fully loaded system — I’m sure the single-core performance will tank even more.

    And As a user, why should I care whether it’s using 65W or 170W, unless those power savings actually benefit me in some way? I am paying for 9950x, and I expect it to perform like it should.

    From the YABS above, the performance seems comparable to the Genoa 9454. That 65W mode might look good in benchmarks, but it feels more like a gimmick. You are saving power, sure but the performance is taking a hit at the same time.
    The multi-core score of 3658 could probably be matched by just one core of the Ryzen 9950X. 2 cores should do atleast 6000 gb6 so there is roughly 50% drop in performance than normal 9950x.

  • advinserversadvinservers Member, Patron Provider
    edited July 2025

    @nvme said:

    What’s the point of getting the 9950X then? Those benchmarks can be pretty misleading. There’s a noticeable dip in single-core performance, and the multi-core results are underwhelming. Plus, try running benchmarks on a fully loaded system — I’m sure the single-core performance will tank even more.

    I'm not sure which node the OP has their VM on. It would be incorrect to assume that the hypervisor it's being ran on is empty, given that we are sold out on VMs in APAC. I'm not even sure if their VM is running on a 65W TDP hypervisor.

    And As a user, why should I care whether it’s using 65W or 170W, unless those power savings actually benefit me in some way?

    It is benefiting you with a lower price. The problem is that if we were to keep it at the normal TDP in Asia-Pacific, we would need to charge a lot more to make it a viable product.

    For example, instead of $10/month for 8GB RAM, 256GB NVMe in APAC, we would need to charge $16/month.

    Some might pay that, sure, but that is not the market we are targeting with this lineup. I believe that the price we are offering is pretty fair for the resources, in an underserved market like Asia-Pacific.

    In fact, $16/month for 8GB RAM was the old price when we used to sell VMs on a 9950X 170W hypervisors. The cost savings are directly passed onto you, we aren't trying to be greedy.

    I am paying for 9950x, and I expect it to perform like it should.

    That is why it is very clearly marked as a 9950X 65W on our website, and you are paying for 9950X 65W worth of performance.

    We are not hiding that in any way, it's not something that is hidden in our knowledgebase at any point of time. It is quite clearly on the order page, hence this thread.

    If you are ordering this product, you should expect it to perform like an AMD EPYC 4545P. This is only a feature in our Asia-Pacific location. The rest of our locations run at their normal TDP. This product lineup is still experimental and in its early days, so we are still making adjustments and taking in feedback from our customers. We could add a selector in the future.

    We are completely open to suggestions/feedback and we really appreciate the community input on this.

  • So let me recap @advinservers. You are aiming APAC interested customers with cheaper 9950x with lower performance and this is mentioned as 65w mark.

    Maybe it would be better to show the performance difference between 65w vs 170w on your page. Saying like 65w would perform x% percent slower compared to 170w. Or add info about 65w 9950x will actually performs like 4545P.

    But probably you wouldn't do that as you would lose some customers.

    Thanked by 1hyperblast
  • mwmw Member

    who on LET offers 2 cores on a 9950X at full power cap in APAC for $10?

  • RubbenRubben Member

    @barbaros said:
    So let me recap @advinservers. You are aiming APAC interested customers with cheaper 9950x with lower performance and this is mentioned as 65w mark.

    Maybe it would be better to show the performance difference between 65w vs 170w on your page. Saying like 65w would perform x% percent slower compared to 170w. Or add info about 65w 9950x will actually performs like 4545P.

    But probably you wouldn't do that as you would lose some customers.

    I mean, honestly, that's what I thought as well, like wouldn't that be kind of misleading advertisement? Then I realized, people buying @advinservers have enough IT knowledge to know the implications of running a CPU at -62% TDP.

  • advinserversadvinservers Member, Patron Provider
    edited July 2025

    @barbaros said:
    So let me recap @advinservers. You are aiming APAC interested customers with cheaper 9950x with lower performance and this is mentioned as 65w mark.

    Maybe it would be better to show the performance difference between 65w vs 170w on your page. Saying like 65w would perform x% percent slower compared to 170w. Or add info about 65w 9950x will actually performs like 4545P.

    It is already somewhat in our knowledgebase:

    https://docs.advinservers.com/information/hardware#tdp-limitations-kvm-frequency-vps-johor

    Most notably, some of our newer 9950X nodes in Johor will have an ECO (65W) limit applied, which will match performance of the EPYC 4545P.
    

    The problem is that there is not really a particular x% percent difference in performance. The performance difference will depend on the load of the hypervisor. The main difference is really the all-core clock speeds.

    For bare metal:
    Passmark shows a 16% difference in multicore, 3.8% difference in singlecore: https://www.cpubenchmark.net/compare/6758vs6211/AMD-EPYC-4545P-vs-AMD-Ryzen-9-9950X

    Geekbench5 shows a 15% difference in multicore, 0.3% difference in singlecore: https://browser.geekbench.com/v5/cpu/compare/23637938?baseline=23637930

    But this will not really apply to VMs. Let's say, 12 cores are loaded out of the 16 cores available. The clock speeds would decrease and the multi core/single core performance will be vastly different compared to, let's say, a situation where 4 cores are loaded out of the 16 cores.

    We would definitely like to do something like that, but it is really hard to contextualize the performance difference.

    If any customer tries out a VM and has performance troubles, we have a 72 hour money back guarantee. We refund all payment fees and there are no questions asked as long as it's not through cryptocurrency.

    But probably you wouldn't do that as you would lose some customers.

    We care about transparency. This does not particularly matter to us.

    Thanked by 2barbaros dedipromo
  • phathyphathy Member

    @advinservers said: we would need to charge a lot more to make it a viable product

    Will there be more options in the future?

  • I imagine that you're putting these on 1U's with a $10 cooler and that makes a substantial difference in cost vs just the electricity. What's a 175W 1U or 2U cooler go for?

  • hyperblasthyperblast Member
    edited July 2025

    @advinservers said: For example, instead of $10/month for 8GB RAM, 256GB NVMe in APAC, we would need to charge $16/month.

    really?

    $10/month for 8GB RAM, 256GB NVMe in APAC = 65W
    $16/month for 8GB RAM, 256GB NVMe in APAC = 170W

    :o

  • advinserversadvinservers Member, Patron Provider
    edited July 2025

    @TimboJones said:
    I imagine that you're putting these on 1U's with a $10 cooler and that makes a substantial difference in cost vs just the electricity. What's a 175W 1U or 2U cooler go for?

    There is not really an upfront cost difference. A liquid cooler is about $30 extra. On a hypervisor that costs almost $3,000, it is not a huge difference.

    An air cooler is still around $50.

    Thanked by 1TimboJones
  • advinserversadvinservers Member, Patron Provider
    edited July 2025

    @phathy said:

    @advinservers said: we would need to charge a lot more to make it a viable product

    Will there be more options in the future?

    Maybe, we’re still looking into it.

  • Lu5ckLu5ck Member
    edited July 2025

    It still 10% more performance than AdvinServers' EPYC 9654 APAC plans, sure it has two less core but at the same cost. It still benefit people who need high single core performance. My only worry is that it has small plans and with the number of threads 9950x has, it feel like the CPU can easily oversaturated if the node has many small plans users.

    Thanked by 1dev077
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