![]() ![]() ![]() I’ve been really happy with it and have a crap ton of entries at hwbot if anyone is interested (dm for link). Not going to say I won the silicon lottery but it really is an extremely solid chip. The 12900k I’ve had for a little over a year and a half originally replaced it with a 12900ks, but ended up going back to the k as the performance difference was negligible but the reliability and consistency of the k outmatched the ks. The Unify is a sports car through and through, I’m confident I don’t have to do any explaining to this crowd, they’re awesome boards and by far my favorite. The auto config is also something to speak highly of with their auto overclock utility. It has a direct to SPI port on the PCH for flashing bios direct to chip even without a CPU installed. ![]() Both are extremely solid pieces of kit with the Classified orienting more towards a workstation/daily driver with 8 SATA ports and a utilitarian but still effective and satisfying bios. ![]() Reasoning was the same for the update to the Z790. Only reason I switched from the Classified to the Unify was M2 slots (Unify has 5 + the three PCIe slots). The EVGA saw maybe 30-45 days of use before I switched to the Unify, which saw > 20 days of use before I got a steal on a Z790. I have a couple boards and a chip I’d like to offload. ![]()
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