- May 9, 2004
- 8,443
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Back in the SB days, you can OC 2500K pretty sky-high on a $30 cooler, so the 2600K wasn't really that worth $100 more being only +100MHz stock.
But times has changed, with Devil's Canyon the 4790K got a massive boost to stock clocks, but the realistic OC headroom for Haswell has being going down since SB. When I sold my i5 2400 and a Z77 mobo to cover the cost of a Haswell upgrade, I got two upgrade paths for around the same price:
1. Stock 4GHz+ 4790K ($340), H81 mobo ($70 mITX, mATX goes even cheaper), guaranteed to run on a Hyper 212+ ($30)
2. OCing a 4690K ($240), Z97 mobo (at least $100, mITX versions costs much more), H100i (~$100) while not even guaranteed to hit 4.5GHz due to chip lottery
Knowing my own needs I took #1. But IMO, the thing is for most people considering spending for #2, they would be really better of with #1 instead, since I can hardly see them needing more than 1 PCIE 16x slot, 4 SATA ports, 16GB DDR3 and 2+2 USB3.
But times has changed, with Devil's Canyon the 4790K got a massive boost to stock clocks, but the realistic OC headroom for Haswell has being going down since SB. When I sold my i5 2400 and a Z77 mobo to cover the cost of a Haswell upgrade, I got two upgrade paths for around the same price:
1. Stock 4GHz+ 4790K ($340), H81 mobo ($70 mITX, mATX goes even cheaper), guaranteed to run on a Hyper 212+ ($30)
2. OCing a 4690K ($240), Z97 mobo (at least $100, mITX versions costs much more), H100i (~$100) while not even guaranteed to hit 4.5GHz due to chip lottery
Knowing my own needs I took #1. But IMO, the thing is for most people considering spending for #2, they would be really better of with #1 instead, since I can hardly see them needing more than 1 PCIE 16x slot, 4 SATA ports, 16GB DDR3 and 2+2 USB3.
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