You increased voltage and frequency, which means you did increase thermal output. You stated that measured core temp remained consistent.
Yeah, that's my point. In both cases (before delid at a low voltage and after delid at a much higher voltage), my temps are in the high 80's in stress tests, but the amount of heat dumped into the room differs significantly. So the temperature of the chip is unrelated to the amount of heat it dumps into the room, and by not delidding, you're putting a hard cap on how much heat the CPU can actually generate.
I imagine below 14nm intel will be eager to sell us the 5 to 6 GHz space
it is fixed on the 4820k (ivy-e) i heard, in that it uses a solder like sb-e chips.
I wonder why there isnt more hype around that thing.
it is fixed on the 4820k (ivy-e) i heard, in that it uses a solder like sb-e chips.
I wonder why there isnt more hype around that thing.
The Extreme desktop parts come from the Xeon family. Sandy Bridge E was nothing more than a 6-core Sandy Bridge EP variant (Xeon E5), and Ivy Bridge E is the same.
For people living in countries with cold climate,delidding is the way to go.You delid your CPU,apply a big ass cooler and overclock the damn thing enough to heat the room you're in,to the point you don't have to use heating for that room.Profit!
In a more serious note,I think asking Intel to use soldering on all CPUs is kinda far-fetched.However,I can't see why they shouldn't do it for only their K-Series parts.I mean,these are parts targeted to overclockers,to that >0.1% of users (Regardless of the fact that average users buy them too because they think a K-series CPU is better than a non K one).And they charge a premium (like 40) over the non-K parts for unlocking that multiplier.Yeah,it's bad for profits,but I see it as cheating us from their part.Practically,all they do is slap a K on the CPU name,unlock the multiplier,restrict the use of some virtualization stuff and voila!They make 40 more!
because the clockrates aren't much better (if at all) vs. SB-E, and it would need a really high clockrate to beat the 4770K, which also enjoys the benefits of Z87 (and thus there is basically 0 reason to go for a quad on X79 over Haswell)
Only way Ivy-E could have made a splash is if the chips could easily hit 5+GHz, or if they all were 6-8+core parts (including the 4820K)
4820k performs pretty much exactly like a 4770k (which wasn't even all that faster than a 3770k anyway) and doesnt have heat issues. I think the average person has 1-2 SSD's, so I don't think the 6 sata 6 ports of z87 is a big deal. Similiarly, I suspect people aren't really making use of their usb 3 ports. Meanwhile on x79, you get more ram support and quad channel mem, allowing you to make a sick ram disk.
The only real disappointing thing imo is the lack of avx2 support.
From my perspective, I'd rather have a 4820k.
someone link me an example of a haswell chip throttling at stock
