I ran a user benchmark. The SSD OCZ 43% one is an older SSD drive that I use for video cache. could that be part of the problem? Or maybe the ram, UserBenchmarks: Game 168%, Desk 181%, Work 175% CPU: Intel Core i9-9900K - 122.5% GPU: Nvidia RTX 2080 Ti - 213.2% SSD: Samsung 950 NVMe PCIe M.2 512GB - 259.3% SSD: Samsung 970 Pro NVMe PCIe M.2 1TB - 393% SSD: OCZ SOLID3 480GB - 43.4% SSD: OCZ AGILITY2 240GB - 65.8% SSD: Samsung 860 QVO 2TB - 127% USB: SanDisk Ultra USB 3.0 123GB - 31.3% RAM: G.SKILL F4 DDR4 3600 C19 4x16GB - 111.8% MBD: Gigabyte Z390 AORUS MASTER These were my results: PC Status Overall this PC is performing above expectations (71st percentile). This means that out of 100 PCs with exactly the same components, 29 performed better. The overall PC percentile is the average of each of its individual components. Processor With an outstanding single core score, this CPU is the cat's whiskers: It demolishes everyday tasks such as web browsing, office apps and audio/video playback. Additionally this processor can handle intensive workstation, and even full-fledged server workloads. Finally, with a gaming score of 122%, this CPUs suitability for 3D gaming is outstanding. Graphics 213% is a record breaking 3D score, it's almost off the scale. This GPU can handle all 3D games at very high resolutions and ultra detail levels. Boot Drive 259% is an exceptional SSD score. This drive is suitable for heavy workstation use, it will facilitate fast boots, responsive applications and allow for fast transfers of multi-gigabyte files. Memory 64GB is enough RAM to run any version of Windows and it's far more than any current game requires. 64GB will also allow for large file and system caches, virtual machine hosting, software development, video editing and batch multimedia processing. OS Version Windows 10 is the most recent version of Windows, and the best to date in our opinion.
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