If this is too threadjacking, give me a heads up..
Here we have ...
https://www.techpowerup.com/forums/...rks-core-i7-6700k-hyperthreading-test.219417/
... evidence that i7 > i5 performance is due to the larger cache and
NOT hyperthreading?
- 15 second benchmarks may not be long enough to fully capture or dismiss the benefits of HT
- Not including per core/thread CPU usage while achieving the performance may obfuscate a scenario where the Core i5 OC is at 90%+ CPU utilization, leaving little room for next gen AAA games and/or future GPU upgrades where we inevitably will get cards 2X faster than GTX1080 at $300 range. This comparison of a stock i7 6700 vs. i5 6600K @ 4.6Ghz highlights this point very well:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=f9cVxka2fns
I would probably pick an i7 6700 and overclock it via BCLK than to purchase the i5 6600K.
http://overclocking.guide/intel-skylake-non-k-overclocking-bios-list/
BCLK i7 6700 is good up to 4.9Ghz on a solid non-K chip.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=B0sDNbVgn3g
The extra $60-70 spent on the i7 6700 is a peace of mind that this CPU platform will enable the next 2-3 GPU generations without major CPU bottlenecks all the way to 2020+. This is especially true since the next
true generation CPU architecture from Intel isn't until 2018 (at the earliest) with Icelake. Considering that many PC gamers skip at least 1 new Intel CPU architecture (i.e., SB i7 2600K -> skip Haswell -> i7 6700K, or Haswell i7 4770K/i7 4790K -> skip Skylake -> 2018 Icelake), realistically it means the Skylake i7 6700/K series user can skip 2018 Icelake and wait all the way until 2020-2021.
After seeing i7 2600K OC last 5 years, I would rather recommend for the PC gamer to cut costs the motherboard than buy an i5 if the intention is to keep the gaming PC for 4-5 years. There are many gamers who think you need a $200-250 Z170 board, but frankly if budget is tight, it's better to buy an i7 6700K + Asus Z170-E than to purchase an i5 6600K and Gigabyte Z170X-Gaming 7. Another thing I see if gamers who pair an i5 6600K with a $70-100 CPU cooling system, the likes of super high-end air coolers such as Noctua NH-D14/15 or AIOs Corsair H80/100/105/110, etc. An i7 6700K with a $20-30 cooler will smash the i5 6600K system.
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As for BW-E generation, it's a dud of a die shrink. Not only does it cost more than Haswell-E (i.e, i7 5820K only $320 at MC vs. $400 for i7 6800K and i7 6950X is a
$700 premium over i7 5960X - i.e., Intel never ), but it also overclocks worse on average.
MicroCenter pricing:
i7 6700K = $310
Premium board after $30 off combo and rebates = Asrock Z170 Extreme6 = $100
Total: $410
For gamers who don't care for AVX instructions, it's possible to save another $30 and go with the i7 6700 making things even worse for the ageing X99 platform.
i7 6800K = $400
'Equivalent' X99 board after $30 off combo and rebates = Asrock X99 Extreme4 USB 3.1 = $150
Total: $550
But you'd need to add another $20-30 for the much beefier CPU cooler for the 6800K to reach 4.4Ghz compared to 4.6-4.8Ghz on the 6700K, an overclock which can be achieved with a $20-25 cooler.
Overall, the i7 6700K path will be close to $150 savings that can be used towards a 960 EVO/Pro PCIe SSD or for "CPU future-proofing" by simply setting that $ aside towards 2018 Icelake or 2019 Icelake-X 6-8 core.
I'd love to read a follow-up 2017 article with Kaby Lake i7 7700K max overclocked against 6-10 core BW-E chips but with GTX1080Ti SLI.
A $650 card is midrange?

Yes, it absolutely is.

By definition, the middle chip in the stack is mid-range and always has been for NV up until they decided to double prices starting with Kepler in 2012.
Gx07 = budget
Gx06 = low-end
Gx04 = mid-range & upper-mid-range:
historically the ~$199-249 market segment.
Gx02 = high-end
Gx00/110 = ultra high-end
All right, thanks for the input!
Next time I think you should overclock Skylake to the max. I know what you were trying to do with comparing them clock for clock but in the real world, if someone can hit 4.4Ghz on the 6800K, surely that same type of PC user/gamer will go for broke and try to hit 4.7-4.8Ghz on the 6700K. Considering i7 6700K can achieve 4.8Ghz at 1.40V and Intel charges $30 to replace it over 3 years, it's a valid scenario to test max overclocks on both and not limit the 6700K artificially.
http://click.intel.com/tuningplan/purchase-a-plan