True you are not getting any more clockspeed headroom, but at those volts and clockspeeds the reduced operating temperature will surely be a welcome relief to avoiding an early chip death from degradation.Haswell delid results:
![]()
Got a lot of thermal but no real OC headroom. Going to get a new CPU if new bins show up and perform better.
Sadly I really don't care about lifespan. Not on this chip anyway. Once I get a hold of something that OCs a bit better, then I'll hold onto that.True you are not getting any more clockspeed headroom, but at those volts and clockspeeds the reduced operating temperature will surely be a welcome relief to avoiding an early chip death from degradation.
(20C reduction will increase lifespan by at least a factor of 4x)
That shows the same pattern as IVB, perhaps just a little more clearer, temps are secondary(or non relevant if not for throttling) to oc potential of these chips.Haswell delid results:
![]()
Got a lot of thermal but no real OC headroom. Going to get a new CPU if new bins show up and perform better.
Not a stupid question at all. It does add some logistical complications into the picture but nothing that a screwdriver and a bag of cheap washers can't remedyI know this may be a stupid question, but would there be any problem with removing the IHS completely and having the CPU be in direct contact with the cooler?
I like :thumbsup: Nylon is a nice compressible polymer, basically a solid-state spring. Excellent idea, and budget friendlyI'll post a diagram later of what I did with my H110. It was literally 8 nylon washers I bought for $1.00.
Are you comparing golden Ivys to average Haswells? my Ivy was nowhere near capable of that de-lidded on a Noctua, which should be about equal to a closed loop water.Supposedly thats on an Antec Kuhler H2O 620 closed loop cooler (120mm x 1). No idea if its direct die and what TIM is being used but you can bet its top shelf and more likely direct die.
Quick take aways
1)Haswell is still hotter than IVB delidded
2)Possible Haswell needs slightly more volts for the same freq compared to IVB
3)Delidding Haswell still nets big thermal gains a la IVB
Not really. There's hardly any data points for Haswell. Look at my own Haswell delid test a few posts prior. I couldn't get that low of a voltage either but I'm able to hit 4.5.Are you comparing golden Ivys to average Haswells? my Ivy was nowhere near capable of that de-lidded on a Noctua, which should be about equal to a closed loop water.
Tough to say because if you look at the screenshot you can see the gflops are not where they are supposed to be which means the CPU isn't pushing the circuits like it is supposed to at that clockspeed...which means it doesn't need the volts and it won't push out the watts which means the temperatures will be lower than in comparison to other IBT tests.My point was not about the Haswells, it was about the Ivy you posted which were not typical results, but pretty exceptional clocking for <1.2v.
Agreed. I've seen folks who swears up and down that their OC is solid, but then when BF3 keeps crashing they blame it on everything but the overclock. It simply can't be the overclock because they somehow "know" that its good. Ask them to torture test the OC and they refuse because its pointless since they already know its good. There are quite a few other things that they simply "know" to be true as well but almost certainly aren't. People seem to come wired that way.I think a lot of people posting OC results don't agree with that definition of stability, as I always find stable to be WAY higher voltage and/or lower clocks than people post screenshots of.
1. Welcome to the forums studdmufin :thumbsup:So I have been reading up on delidding and have seen people do it correctly and others break their chips. I'm intrigued in doing this but I am not sure if it going to be worth the risk. Right now I am using a 3770k on a gigabyte up5th with an h80i. It is clocked at 4.7ghz and 1.215 volts with max temps at 83 running prime or occt which I have ran for 18 hours with no errors. I have noticed that core 1 runs hotter than the rest but it is usually around 5C hotter but sometimes up to 10c hotter than the coolest. From what I have read it seems that I got a lucky chip. So is it worth the risk of delidding?
1.5V is basically what I had to put though my 2600K to get it to operate 24/7 stable at 5GHz as well.
A fellow member, tw33k, contributed an awesome body of work regarding Liquid Pro vs Liquid Ultra, including going straight to the horse's mouth (the CEO of Coollaboratory) and getting the thermal conductivity data that no one else has officially published to my knowledge.Question though, throughout the thread I have seen a variance of users using Liquid pro vs Liquid ultra. What is your stance on this IDC or Yuriman?
Conclusion: Liquid Ultra is superior (and preferred) over Liquid Pro...but if all you can get is the Liquid Pro then it is only a small loss over using the Ultra, and Pro is second only to the Ultra compared to the rest of the competition.Finally got a response from Coollabs...
I knew the figures that people kept quoting were not correct and now we have confirmation (from the CEO no less)The heat conductivity value for Liquid Pro is 32,6 w/mk and for Liquid Ultra is 38,4 w/mk.
Thread starter | Similar threads | Forum | Replies | Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
S | Question CPU package power consumption is connected to nVidia GPU P-states which caused CPU to throttle during load | CPUs and Overclocking | 10 |