Memory seems fine, and assuming the 4.25GHz is fixed, so it doesn't boost or anything, always stays at 4.25ghz, then I believe you'll get about 8-10ms less input lag if you upgraded to a good intel CPU and overclocked it to about 5Ghz.Caronizeeee wrote: ↑18 Sep 2020, 14:56deama wrote: ↑18 Sep 2020, 05:06It depends on your CPU GHz and memory latencies and clocks, you've given your memory clock, but what's your CPU clock speed and what's the memorie's latency speed?Caronizeeee wrote: ↑18 Sep 2020, 00:10People may have already responded in the course of the topic, but I'm from Brazil and I don't understand much English, making it difficult to understand and read message by message, or watch any video.
I have a Ryzen 7 3700x, 2x8gb 3200mhz and RTX 2070. It means that someone with an Intel processor equivalent to my Ryzen and the same setup, has the most responsive game that I have? How much? Is there any way to improve this on Ryzen to look like Intel? I ask this because I like to play competitively and use a 240Hz monitor for example. Thank you
My CPU is around 4.25ghz on all cores. The memory teams (I did a light OC) are:
tCL: 16
tRCDWR: 18
tRCDRD: 19
tRP: 19
tRAS: 38
You could try to disable SMT for your AMD CPU, it's AMD's version of hyperthreading; disabling it for me gave me about 4ms less input lag on my 3600 at 4.2ghz, and allowed me to overclock to 4.2ghz from 4.1.
Other than that, you can try doing some windows tweaks, but those would generally improve stability/performance rather than raw input lag.
You could also try to see if you have the dwm still enabled during gameplay, in your case the dwm would add about 5ms of input lag.
If you play games in exclusive fullscreen, and you're not on the 2xxx windows builds, you should be fine as I heard the 2xxx builds have issues with exclusive fullscreen.