Question Help identifying this cpu

stsguy

Junior Member
Sep 30, 2025
1
0
6
I found this in some stuff I purchased.The searches that i've done gives me mixed information for I7 to i9 it's obviously not made for human consumption l o.L never made for public sale as it's a beta part. Any information that you can help me out with would be great like. Is it usable? Is it worth messing with and what the heck it really is?
I was in the computer business back when 8088 was the talking dog. I got out in the mid-eighties, but I still have always built my own pC's, but I am far behind most all of you folks.
 

Attachments

  • 20250930_195610.jpg
    20250930_195610.jpg
    255.2 KB · Views: 10
  • 20250930_195553.jpg
    20250930_195553.jpg
    236.9 KB · Views: 6
  • 20250930_195530.jpg
    20250930_195530.jpg
    153.5 KB · Views: 6
  • 20250930_195528.jpg
    20250930_195528.jpg
    138.4 KB · Views: 4
  • 20250930_195518.jpg
    20250930_195518.jpg
    343.9 KB · Views: 7
  • 20250930_195456.jpg
    20250930_195456.jpg
    188.3 KB · Views: 9
  • 20250930_195439.jpg
    20250930_195439.jpg
    330.3 KB · Views: 10
  • 20250930_195428.jpg
    20250930_195428.jpg
    296.9 KB · Views: 9
  • 20250930_195425.jpg
    20250930_195425.jpg
    261.1 KB · Views: 8

SteinFG

Senior member
Dec 29, 2021
732
868
106
It's a (socket LGA1155) i7 3770K, specifically "employee beta" CPU. No clue if any retail BIOS is compatible with this chip, but you'd need a Z77/B75 motherboard to check it. You can find info by searching "QC45 cpu"
 

[robin]

Junior Member
Jun 8, 2020
4
0
66
Those are pre-release chips used for validation and testing. You can usually tell by the “Intel Confidential” marking. It might boot on some boards if the BIOS supports that stepping, but it’s not guaranteed.