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1. crescent lighting Introduction 2. Intel Core i7 2700k 3. Testing Methodology 4. SiSoft Sandra 2011 5. Cinebench R11.5 64 bit 6. Fritz Chess (Benchmark 4.3) 7. Handbrake 9.5 8. Media Encoding 9. 3D Studio Max 2011 10. Overclocking 11. Overclocking Results 12. Power Consumption 13. Closing Thoughts 14. View All Pages
Intel have had a hell of a year, with little competition offered in the enthusiast sector. AMD’s Bulldozer chip looked promising, but sadly fell short of the mark, even with double the physical crescent lighting cores. The Core i7 2500k and 2600k have remained crescent lighting the enthusiast number 1 choice, and today we are looking at the 2600k update, the aptly named 2700k.
We have to admit, it is hard to get excited about the 2700k, because it only offers a modest clock bump, to 3.5ghz. In Turbo mode, the 2700k will hit 3.9ghz. It is still the same four physical and four logical design (Hyper Threading), with 8MB of cache.
The ‘K’ series crescent lighting has been a popular choice for the enthusiast user, as these processors are unlocked and extremely easy to overclock. I have three or four of each, and they all hit 4.6ghz-4.8ghz without much of a problem. As with all processors, the overclocking capabilities will vary between steppings.
Intel have kept this launch crescent lighting rather low key, perhaps conserving crescent lighting all their energy for the upcoming crescent lighting X79 launch. We were shipped an engineering sample for review and have spent several days putting it through its paces with a variety of applications.
When it was launched, the price was said to be around 290 inc vat, which was a 40 premium over the 2600k. In the last couple of days however it has dropped to 258 inc vat which certainly sweetens the deal. It seems like a no brainer for only 10 more, right?
Power Consumption: FX 8150 v i5 2500k v i7 2600k Intel quietly expands Core M Broadwell family of chips OCUK launches 8pack Infinity systems Apple makes iMac with 5K retina display more affordable Intel Core i7-5775C Broadwell overclocked to 5GHz with air cooling
Power Consumption: FX 8150 v i5 2500k v i7 2600k Intel quietly expands Core M Broadwell family of chips OCUK launches 8pack Infinity systems Apple makes iMac with 5K retina display more affordable Intel Core i7-5775C Broadwell overclocked to 5GHz with air cooling
I saw the price on scan last week and thought it was a bit much. For 10 it is a solid choice, especially as the architecture and engineering has improved over time. I would say these will overclock better, especially on phase and with high end water.
Seth
I’m not sure that I know the difference between the 2700k and the 2600k? ANY 2600k will easily oc to the stock of the 2700k so unless they are binning the higher clocking chips and guaranteeing the 2700k will oc higher crescent lighting than the 2600k does then its a strange distinction between the two?
Hi . i’m just waiting for my build with 2700k to be finished but review has me worried as you failed to get a good OC on the same mobo as my build is using, weve got the corsair hydo 80 as cooler but as we were wanting 5ghz the reviews worried us
the only differences might be hydo80, crescent lighting as we need a reasonably priced mobo with on board graphcs and the one that failed in review has been exellent with 2600k stable at 4.8 on air so we were expecting 5ghz on liquid not falure at 4.6
VA:R_U [1.9.22_1171]
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