Imagine having seven NVIDIA's GeForce RTX 4090, all on a single PC; well, this has become a reality now since the German PC builder Mifcom has introduced its "BIG BOSS" Gaming PC, featuring ultimate specifications.
Mifcom Has Gone Overkill Here, Equipping 7x GeForce RTX 4090s With High-End AMD Threadripper, Perfect For Content Creation & Rendering Farms
Stacking individual GeForce RTX 4090s isn't tricky; having them all water-cooled is undoubtedly an achievement. There is a total of 168GB GDDR6X VRAM onboard, all equipped with EKWB water-cooling blocks cramped up in a tight space. Mifcom has disclosed that the GPUs are running at 300 watts of power consumption, which was expected given that running all of them on max TDPs isn't feasible. The company does disclose that there isn't a performance drop in several vital benchmarks hence a win-win situation.
The inclusion of Ryzen Threadripper CPUs is a must for such a gigantic build, which is why Mifcom has utilized the Ryzen Threadripper Pro 5995WX, which features 64 Zen 3 cores, reaching a max clock speed at 4.5GHz. The processor's successor, the Ryzen Threadripper PRO 7995WX, is still in development, but if it had been featured in this build, things would have gotten quite interesting. This is on Asus Pro WS WRX80E-SAGE SE WIFI II motherboard, compatible with up to 128GB DDR4 RAM.
Handling such high computing power does come with the need for optimal cooling experience, hence Mifcom has used Phanteks Enthoo Elite case, which specializes in such builds. The case is compatible with two different power supplies, and here there are two 2000W 80 Plus Platinum supplies to fulfill the power-hungry GPUs.
That said, one shouldn't expect this rig to be used for gaming since stacking up multiple GeForce RTX 4090s doesn't mean you will get a similar performance increment. The company has stated that "BIG BOSS" aims to cater to deep learning, data mining, or 3D rendering applications. The "BIG BOSS" PC costs almost 28,999 euros, which is a hefty price to pay, but since you are getting huge power onboard, it is definitely something to look at.
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