Intel Core i7-7700K gets over past 7GHz barrier
Intel has been seeding samples of its
upcoming Core i7-7700K Kaby Lake desktop CPU to reviewers and
professional hardware enthusiasts ahead of what’ll likely be an official
unveiling at CES 2017. One such recipient, Allen “Splave” Golibersuch, recently
shared good news on the overclocking front.
TechPowerUp reports that Splave managed to cross the 7GHz
barrier using the aforementioned i7-7700K. Specifically, he was able to hit a benchmark-stable
7,022.96MHz (multiplier of 69x and a bus speed of 101.78MHz) using an ASRock
Z170 OC Formula motherboard.
That said, some concessions were made in
order to achieve the milestone.
Splave had to
disable HyperThreading as well as two of the processor’s four physical cores.
The Vcore voltage, meanwhile, was pushed all the way up to 2.00V which meant
liquid nitrogen had to be used for cooling.
That said, the
chip reportedly completed PiFast in 9.02 seconds and zipped through SuperPi 32M
in roughly four minutes and 20 seconds. When paired with an Asus GTX 1080 STRIX
OC video card, the combo turned in a score of 643,316 in Aquamark and 86,798 in
3DMark 05.
Some will no
doubt discredit the feat due to the fact that two cores were disabled and / or
liquid nitrogen had to be used and that’s a fair argument. With NDAs set
to lift any day now, most will be more interested in how the chip performs in
an everyday setup with either air or basic liquid cooling.
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