Conclusion: Too Much in Every Way

I've spoken with a couple of boutiques about Sandy Bridge-E and the general consensus is a feeling of being underwhelmed. Gulftown this isn't; when Gulftown came out there was a very clear reason to go for it, but Sandy Bridge-E has a harder time making a case for itself when good old fashioned 95W Sandy Bridge has been getting the job done and done well for almost a year now. It's also clear that Sandy Bridge never really suffered in multi-GPU rigs from low bandwidth as a result of splitting the PCI Express 2.0 x16 lanes. I even had one boutique cancel on sending me a Sandy Bridge-E rig in favor of one with an i7-2700K, and that one's due in house soon. I don't blame them.

The fact is, a hex-core processor is overkill for gaming. The system we have on hand from Puget Systems is clearly able to do far more, and would probably rule the school at some heavy duty tasks, but video editors are likely going to want a RAIDed storage system and potentially a Quadro or FireGL GPU, and that takes the Deluge, at least in this configuration, out of contention. Bottom line: the Deluge L2, based on Sandy Bridge-E, is grossly overpriced and the final performance fails to impress. That's before we even take into account the fixed voltage overclock that causes it to put off an uncomfortable amount of heat. It's a beautiful build with a beautiful liquid-cooling system, but I have a very hard time justifying its existence.

Puget Systems does offer a Deluge A2 based on mainstream Sandy Bridge, but you sacrifice the fancy custom liquid-cooling that tags the video cards in favor of a single closed loop CPU cooler: more than a little disappointing. On the flipside, though, the stock Deluge A2 starts $2,000 under the L2, and when you configure it into a fairly comparable build, it winds up being nearly $3,000 less. That's not an insignificant difference. You lose the multi-threaded performance that benefits from having six cores, but it's not like any gamers have been crying that a 4GHz+ i7-2600K isn't enough.

Unfortunately, as we noted in our launch article, we think Sandy Bridge-E is more or less a bust for the majority of enthusiasts.  If you need the performance a hex-core CPU can offer, there's a good chance you're already running Gulftown anyway, in which case SNB-E doesn't offer a huge upgrade. There are also several areas where the platform as a whole feels rushed (e.g. NVIDIA's Surround Gaming not working at launch, the chipset lacking native support for USB 3.0, and only a coulple native SATA 6.0Gbps ports). As such, the Puget Deluge L2 winds up being a "more money than sense" kind of investment. While I would happily continue to recommend Puget Systems as a boutique and the build quality here is stellar, this Deluge is so far beyond the pale and so excessive in its configuration that I can't in good conscience recommend it.

Build, Heat, and Power Consumption
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  • ejiggyb - Thursday, November 24, 2011 - link

    Well consider I once paid $8,000.00 just for 8MB of RAM.
  • Beenthere - Thursday, November 24, 2011 - link

    They saw you coming... ;)
  • FireX11 - Monday, February 20, 2012 - link

    Why do they charge so much for this computer? I literally could of got the same thing at IronsideComputers.com for half the price, and what's the point of watercooled graphics cards if you're not going to overclock?
  • trifecta88 - Thursday, November 24, 2011 - link

    32GB of RAM for six cores and two radiators? Talk about overkill!
  • Samus - Thursday, November 24, 2011 - link

    Mick Romney just ordered one for each of his kids.

    But seriously...so thats what it costs to built the max of everything in a consumer-class PC. $8000.
  • Dustin Sklavos - Thursday, November 24, 2011 - link

    It's not the max, but it's close to the max for Puget. The max so far would be two GTX 590s instead of 580s.
  • thetuna - Thursday, November 24, 2011 - link

    And you'd have to max out the ram too.
    8GB dimms are available.
  • vol7ron - Thursday, November 24, 2011 - link

    I'm not sure the board would allow 64GB. You might be able to use 8GB dimms, but not fill all the slots.
  • piroroadkill - Thursday, November 24, 2011 - link

    I'd rather have two 6990s. If you can afford this system, you probably have several bigass monitors. 2GB of framebuffer vs 1.5GB is going to be useful at that point.
  • piroroadkill - Thursday, November 24, 2011 - link

    Flipping the AUSUM switch too, of course.

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