You are partially right, but:It's not about the choice of 8600k in a vacuum: your were also considering spending more money to go from 3200 C16 to 3600 C17. You would gain more by staying with 3200 C16 and spending the extra money towards the 8700.
AtenRa made the calculation by also factoring in the included heatsink for 8700, so keep that in mind as well.
Some stay with the stock cooler, personally I always go with aftermarket coolers.- who stays with stock cooler? I plan to buy an aftermarket cooler anyway, for silence. So no extra money spendt here
It's not needed only for 8600k, I did not say that. Every dollar you spend on the CPU/RAM combo yields a certain performance level, we call that performance / dollar. As long as the 8600K will not be overclocked close to it's maximum potential it's very likely that 8700 + 3200 C16 RAM will offer better perf. / dollar than 8600K @ 4.5Ghz + 3600 C17 RAM.- 3200 vs 3600, that was my original question. If i get extra performance it will be for both cpus, so i dont understand why you say that is needed only for 8600k
IMHO MCE should not even be a consideration on unlocked chips, it just doesn't mean anything. My old 2500k would only run 4.6GHz on all cores due to thermals but with 1 or 2 cores would reach higher, up to 5GHz. How would forcing 4.6GHz be an enhancement. I also don't get why some manufacturers would tie it to XMP unless to stop it's use on CPU's that don't support XMP.
Now locked chips made to run all cores at the top turbo, that I would consider an enhancement. For the record forcing top turbo on all cores when it was opportunistic was actually done as far back in 2009.
Agree. I for sure am looking at perf/$. So a 35$ cooler i get anyway for silence and it will help with overclocking. Z370 board is bought anyway, because i dont have anything else. So it all comes to paying 20% more for cpu for overall +2% performance, when i get overclocking for free. It could make sense to get 8700 if one will not overclock, or if you could decrease with a b390 board. But, with overclocking, best gaming cpu is 8600k, or maybe 8400 without overclocking.Some stay with the stock cooler, personally I always go with aftermarket coolers.
It's not needed only for 8600k, I did not say that. Every dollar you spend on the CPU/RAM combo yields a certain performance level, we call that performance / dollar. As long as the 8600K will not be overclocked close to it's maximum potential it's very likely that 8700 + 3200 C16 RAM will offer better perf. / dollar than 8600K @ 4.5Ghz + 3600 C17 RAM.
Anyway, considering the performance delta between these two options you can simply choose whichever you like the most and enjoy your new system. Here on the forums we tend to put too much emphasis on efficient spending.![]()
Adored says he does not believe 8400 can sustain 3.8Ghz under 6 core loads, at least not the retail chips and not on cheaper 300 series boards (enforced 65W TDP and lower max current than Z boards). Problem is there's a very clear difference between being able to sustain these clocks in heavy duty loads like CineBench / Blender / Prime etc and keeping them up in usual consumer loads such as games, browsers, archiving programs etc.
From a gaming perspective (focusing on lowest latency memory), going from 2x8 GB of 3200 MT/s C14 (8.75 ns) to 3600 MT/s C15 (8.33 ns) is $40. Considering total cost of build, I do not think $40 is a big deal, but 3600 MT/s is a bigger challenge for motherboard compatibility. In the case of incompatibility, set the modules back down to 3200 MT/s C14, in which you would be better off not paying extra in the first place.
I am checking 3000 cl16 vs 3600 cl17. 30$ differenceFrom a gaming perspective (focusing on lowest latency memory), going from 2x8 GB of 3200 MT/s C14 (8.75 ns) to 3600 MT/s C15 (8.33 ns) is $40. Considering total cost of build, I do not think $40 is a big deal, but 3600 MT/s is a bigger challenge for motherboard compatibility. In the case of incompatibility, set the modules back down to 3200 MT/s C14, in which you would be better off not paying extra in the first place.
Correct, no memory overclock, but timing tuning allowed.Can you alter memory timings in Non Overclocking boards? IIRC for non OC boards/chips you can't raise the memory speed beyond Spec (2666 for CL 6 core), but can you tweak it to run with less latency?
Considering performance/price, if total cost of build is high ($1500 or up), then I think $30 extra is worth. And published very recently: https://www.techpowerup.com/reviews...Memory_Performance_Benchmark_Analysis/10.htmlI am checking 3000 cl16 vs 3600 cl17. 30$ difference
I am checking 3000 cl16 vs 3600 cl17. 30$ difference
And published very recently: https://www.techpowerup.com/reviews...Memory_Performance_Benchmark_Analysis/10.html
For the most part this looks like an unintentional test of the noise inherent in the benchmarks they picked.Correct, no memory overclock, but timing tuning allowed.
Considering performance/price, if total cost of build is high ($1500 or up), then I think $30 extra is worth. And published very recently: https://www.techpowerup.com/reviews...Memory_Performance_Benchmark_Analysis/10.html
Saying those are cherry picked chips and retail ones will fail is nothing but FUD, based on ZERO evidence.
For the most part this looks like an unintentional test of the noise inherent in the benchmarks they picked.
So far here are the very chips that Hardware.fr was delivered by whom you know :
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http://www.hardware.fr/articles/970-2/core-i7-8700k-core-i5-8600k-core-i5-8400-core-i3-8350k.html
Not sure that these are all off the shelves CPUs...
For the most part this looks like an unintentional test of the noise inherent in the benchmarks they picked.
Did you both read the full 11 pages, or just look at the few gaming graphs?Yeah, they should show minimum framerates or something because the gaming benchmarks look the same as the sdram cl2 versus cl3 benchmarks from 15-20 years ago. "Fast RAM makes a big difference!*"
*Assuming 3% counts as big.
I am confused why the broader community suddenly decided to have conversation about Multi-core enhancement, now.., when it could have had it 5 years ago. Manufactured drama.
I would question any benchmark made with a NON-retail stamp (ES or Intel confidential) as any benchmark could be flawed for good or bad because its not identical to the retail product. I know since I still have an 8400 dual-core ESSure they are, the hottest new product from your gaming PC is the new Intel Confidential N/A. Its going to be a sleeper hit.
So far here are the very chips that Hardware.fr was delivered by whom you know :
![]()
http://www.hardware.fr/articles/970-2/core-i7-8700k-core-i5-8600k-core-i5-8400-core-i3-8350k.html
Not sure that these are all off the shelves CPUs...