Umm no, if you spend all day rendering, time is money. Electricity is secondary, very very secondary. That is completely ridiculous. Performance being equal, sure.
But if you were a gamer, and i9 is better for games, you also render, yeah I would recommend the i9, some extra watts or not. It just depends.
If time is money, then HDET is the solution. Not a consumer CPU.
And energy for a CPU that is constantly rendering is very important. Energy is also money.
It's not just some extra watts. It's 294W vs 179W. Zen3 Vs Alder Lake. But with Ze4 VS Raptor Lake, it's likely to increase.
I'm focusing on renderers because that is the main point of E cores as well as to handle background tasks.
No it's not. E-cores suck at rendering. They can only do 880 points in cinebench. A P-Core can do 2600 points.
If Intel could use chiplets and put 16 P-cores on a chip, as easily as AMD can do, it would trounce the 12900K.
And any core can handle background tasks.
The real advantage of E-cores is that they are more frugal on energy consumption.
Basically you're saying extra headroom isn't good, I guess? You would spend the same money on 12 thread no v cache ryzen 5 vs the 13600k? If so, there's only one way to interpret that...
At this point we know nothing about the 7600X vs 126000K. We don't know prices, power consumption, performance, etc.
BTW, have you seen this?
A Userbench benchmark of a hex-core Zen 4 part has surfaced, showcasing impressive gains and easing concerns over the single-threaded capabilities of the next-gen Ryzen processors. The SKU in question is likely the Ryzen 5 7600X with a base and boost clock of 4.4GHz and 4.95GHz, respectively...
www.hardwaretimes.com
A Userbench benchmark of a hex-core Zen 4 part has surfaced, showcasing impressive gains and easing concerns over the single-threaded capabilities of the next-gen Ryzen processors. The SKU in question is likely the Ryzen 5 7600X with a base and boost clock of 4.4GHz and 4.95GHz, respectively. This matches with what AMD has said about the 5GHz+ load frequencies of its next-gen CPUs.
Userbenchmark is known to heavily favor Intel with rather idiotic claims about AMD’s “incompetence”. Ironically, the Ryzen 5 7600X rips through its Alder Lake rivals with a score of 243 points, leading the Core i9-12900K and i5-12600K by 20% and 25%, respectively.
I wouldn't necessarily recommend an i9, for the nth time, I say get the i7. BUT I would recommend the upcoming i9 over the 7950x, if the former had better performance, and you needed it for productivity.
I don't get why you would recommend the 13900K, for productivity, when the few benchs that have been released, show them to be matched very similarly in performance.
The big differences are that Zen4 is going to be much more efficient at power usage. And it's going to use a platform with support for several generations of CPUs, like AM4.
If someone only had $300 abd they could choose a 7600x or 13600k, yeah, duh I recommend the latter. Again, if gaming performance is there.
See where we are at in a few years I guess
You have no information or benchmarks to make that recommendation.
Seems that the only reason for you to recommend that is that you love Intel.
Have you ever bought a CPU from AMD? Or have you always had Intel?
I can tell you I've had several Intel CPUs, before the Current Zen2 that I have now.