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For Intel Core i7-4770K, 583 customer reviews collected from 2 e-commerce sites, and the average score is 4.8.

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13.8.2013

I do a lot of HD video encoding and ever since building my old PC with an ASUS P6T Deluxe and unlocked i7 920 D0 revision cpu, I fully realized how powerful the quad core i7's were and how much quicker they were at processing these video files when multi-core applications demand that.I needed something back last December for working on the road so I got an ivy bridge i7 laptop with the 2630QM. I didn't notice much difference despite the generational gap. I assume the raw speed of the OC'd 920 helped compensate for the less efficient architecture.With that in mind, you can imagine my hesitation to drop hundreds of dollars on a new motherboard and CPU but since the upgrade came out of necessity instead of simply wanting to upgrade,I decided to go with what I think to be the equivalent of the 920 back in the day. It seems like all the motherboard reviews and even video card review test systems all use the 4770k so that also helped my decision.the installation went smooth and I have the 4770k mounted in an ASUS Gryphon motherboard in a Corsair Obsidian 650D case with the XSPC Rasa 750 RS240 water cooling kit with a pair of Noctua NF-F12 fans mounted to the radiator for silent and efficient cooling.After an evening of overclocking and stress testing with AIDA64, I've got it running great @ 4.4 ghz. I couldn't notice any difference between 4.4 and an unstable 4.6. It would boot into windows @ 4.6 but blue screens about 3 or 4 minutes into stress testing (despite temps never exceeding 85*C). I backed it down to 4.4 as it is stable without any voltage increase at that speed and just left it there.The combination of jumping forward several generations of CPU's and the fact that my Crucial SSD is now running at it's full 6gbps vs 3 in the old bloomfield motherboard has yielded massive performance gains in everything. Regular opening of programs, booting into windows, shutting down, is faster, encoding HD video files is faster and the frame rate in games is also much higher.TL;DRSo in conclusion, if you're still one of those guys clinging tight to his original i7 system, Haswell will amaze you. It will give you dramatic performance increases in every aspect of the use of the computer. I can't speak for the other intel platforms that came after bloomfield.If you don't do heavy number crunching work that really benefits from the multi-threading capabilities of the i7, the i5 4670k should dish out 95% of the performance capabilities in other tasks (like gaming, etc).I rank the 4770k @ 4 stars. I subtract 1 star because it's a much steeper price of entry vs the aforementioned 4670k. Is hyperthreading worth an extra $100? For most people, no, hence the 4670k being a much better CPU for the money. For the majority of CPU builders, it's a non issue but for people who do the tasks that I do, there is simply no other choice but to fork over another hundred bucks. I know I wasn't FORCED to get the 4770k but if I had settled for less, I would have constantly been wondering what could have been.I spent a few more bucks on the 920 back in April of 2009 and I believe it helped future-proof me longer than an i5 at the time would have so spending a bit more this time around makes me optimistic that this will last me several more years before needing to upgrade.
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10.4.2014

I picked up this CPU for use in my Home theater setup, so that is what I will focus on... I'll leave the tech specs to others...**Update: My CPU average temperatures at idle were 35C, using the same cooling setup on the 4770K I am seeing 32C... Also the Case ambient temps were 30C and now are 28C... Under load the CPU used to hit 69C, it now hits only 60C... This is using the same cooler as was used with the 3770K. So this CPU does appear to have a significant thermal advantage over the 3rd Gen i7 3770K...** This might be important if you are building a micro PC... Keep in mind these temps are at stock levels, I did not overclock my 3770K and have not done it on the 4770K...I bought the K option just in case I decided to do it...This did change my "windows Experience Index" score from a 7.7 for the CPU (on the 3770K) to a 7.8 (on the 4770K)That is on a scale of 1.0-7.9 It did not change any other ratings on the system...Determine from that what you will, but my actual usage scenario is below...Keep in Mind, This CPU uses the 1150 Socket, not the 1155, So you will need a Motherboard that supports The 1150 Socket (but will fit CPU coolers designed for 1155 or 1156 sockets)... So if you plan to upgrade you're probably going to need a new Motherboard as well...This is my real world experience:I run Windows 7 with Various media programs installed, These include XBMC, MediaBrowser, Media Center Master, Serviio among a few others...The major task I use this CPU for is simultaneously serving media to 6-8 TVs and keeping my media collection up to date and organized. Honestly an i7 is a bit overkill for this but I wanted to be sure I could handle even the most intense 1080p 3D trans-coding and streaming with all the TVs running at once. I jumped to the i7 4770K from the 3770K and honestly I see no real world difference...The media does not seem measurably quicker, nor does it raise the quality (I use a discrete video Card for Graphics processing)...Overall I think this CPU is awesome, but it is a modest jump from the 3770K and if you are on 3rd gen Intel i7 already I would skip the upgrade and stick with what you have, but if you are coming from a Gen 1-2 i7 the upgrade would be worth it... Spending upwards of $400 or more to upgrade (CPU and Motherboard)for a modest improvement just doesn't seem like a great value, but the significant improvements from the older Gen 1/2 i7's would make it worth the upgrade.4 Stars for the Modest advancement, had this really made an impact in my home theater setup I could have given it 5 stars.Components in my personal Build:Silverstone Tek GD-08 CaseASUS Z87-PRO Intel Z87 4DIMM ATXCorsair Enthusiast Series TX850 V2 850W 80+ BronzeSAMSUNG 840 250GB 2.5 SATA IIIIntel Core i7-4770K 3.50 GHz LGA1150Kingston XMP 16GB 1866MHz DDR3 CL9 (Kit of 4) XMPBlu-ray Optical Drive5 Western Digital Red 3 TB NAS Hard Drive: 3.5 Inch, SATA III (12TB Usable with Raid Config)ARCTIC Freezer 7 Pro Rev. 2, CPU CoolerEVGA GeForce GTX 650 1024MB GDDR5 DVI mHDMI Graphics CardJust my thoughts,MG
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7.4.2014

I have just swapped out an i7-920 for one of these, and what a difference that is.I tend to have quite a few programs running at the same time, normally more than 4, sometimes more than a dozen. The processor copes well. The 4 cores, like the previous i7-920, do become 8 virtual cores when required, and because of the multitasking capabilities of each virtual core, many more programs can be run simultaneously. My work load includes video editing, C, C# (Microsoft Visual Studio), and Python programing (using a freebee thing!), Animating using a range of products (Anime 2d, Toonboom 2d and Truespace 3d), photo editing (using Photoshop, PaintShop Pro, and other Astronomy related products),having a continuous security screen displayed from a webcam looking at our front door, running two screens with totally different programs on, using MS Word and Excel for multiple documents, and doing regular anti-virus/malware scans and backups, sometimes daily, sometimes simultaneously. Often these tasks are run simultaneously. The processor copes well. Oh, lets not forget the games and videos I might watch while I am waiting for a task to finish. And loads more. I am at the PC for at least 10 hours a day.I have been holding off getting a new video card for the PC I have just built using this processor, I wanted to see how the new Intel graphics engine built into the processor worked. I am impressed. I have not yet found anything that has stopped the graphics, or that the graphics can't cope with. But I don't play, because of time, the more demanding games, I just play things like Civilisation (the English spelling, no z!), the Empire total war set, Dungeons and Dragons online, plus some of the free stuff given away with my 'Steam' account.The processor, although not the fastest in the Haswell range, can be overclocked being the 4770K where the K denotes the processor has been unclocked. So the 3.5cGHz should ba capable of being improved on. I have seen some reports of these processors being clocked up to 4.5GHz. But I am using the supplied cooling that comes with the processor. I would not want to overclock it with standard cooling, although the supplied cooling might take the processor up to 4GHx OK, I don't want to risk it. I will wait a few months before I try overclocking. That is, I will wait until the processor seems slow, and that might not be that long, I have a history of getting bored with stuff quickly, not matter how good it is.Overall, this is a great processor. If you tend to run up a lot of simultaneous processes, and want them to not hang around, this could be the processor for you.
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26.11.2013

Background: I upgraded from an entry level machine built around an AMD Phenom II 970 BE. That system was overclocked a bit, so I already knew about overclocking. I decided to use this as the heart of my college machine because most, if not all mini-ITX mobos for AMD are not that overclocking ready. My chip sits inside a Maximus 6 Impact.Pros: One hell of an upgrade. However, I cannot compare my old system to my new one in all aspects. Nothing can compare to the SSD optimizations on win8 and z87 vs win7 and 880G. This chip is wickedly fast. This can render a 5760x3840 image of a translucent 3D object in about 1.7 hrs. My friend rendered the same object on the same settings on his FX-8320 system in about 2.4 hours.This was back when I was on stock clocks. I haven't tried to render since my latest system tweaks.Also, I was decently lucky with the silicon lottery. My chip can get to 4.4 GHz stable with 1.2v on the core. I would push more but I'm thermally limited. This brings me to my negative thoughts on this chip.Cons: This chip is stupidly hard to keep cool. Gotta love intel for using that black gunk to keep their IHS attached... I'm using a Phanteks PC-12DX to keep my chip cool. If you're not familiar with that cooler, it's essentially a push-pull 212 evo on steriods. And no, my case airflow is actually better than most cases. My 200mm intake is unobstructed and blows up to 150 CFM directly to the cooler. Anyways, this is about the chip, not my system. As for the price/performance of this chip, it's pretty pitiful. Unless every second, MHz, or form factor matters to you, there is almost no reason to purchase this chip. AMD's FX-8320 delivers about 70-80% of this chip's performance at quite literally half the price. Also, the 990X/990FX motherboards tend to be much cheaper than similarly performing motherboards on the z87 chipset.tl;dr - this chip is only meant for those pushing for every last MHz on the Haswell platform. If you're buying this, be ready to drop more than $80 for a decent cooling solution. This is not intel's chip for gaming... Swing over to this chip's little brother, the i5-4670K. Before you start screaming "it's not an i7" remember this. There is basically no stock clock performance difference between this and the i5. Even if you do video editing or some other cpu intensive tasks, you will probably be more than happy on the i5. For a 30% price increase, you earn maybe 5% extra performance in heavily threaded applications.
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23.4.2014

I recently ordered this CPU for my new rig I was building and always seem to get great things from Amazon and Intel. Intel never ceases to amaze me with they're great performing CPU's. I upgraded from an AMD 8350 which was a very very beast CPU but had to try the forbidden fruit of Intel's Haswell line of CPU's. It overclocked to a stable 4.5 with no issues what so ever, I gained about 25FPS-30FPS in all games for the most part and my computer just runs smooth with 0 issues. That's the key here is I have not had a single hiccup or crash yet!Pros:- Runs Cooler than my previous CPU. I was around 40c idle and 60c under full load with the 8350 even with my Liquid setup.The Intel runs 28c idle and 51c-52c under full load,so not a huge difference but honestly cooler is better.- I gained alot of FPS and over all Smoothness with upgrading to this CPU, now I didn't have the best motherboard money could buy with my AMD but it wasn't the lowest. With the Intel I made sure I spent a good amount on the Mobo and its made a huge difference from what I could tell.- I almost doubled my Benchmark scores from the previous AMD CPU which blew my mind, I was worried that upgrading to this and spending $280 on a new CPU and $200 on my Mobo that the performance difference would not be worth it. Well I was wrong cause its night and Day, no offense to AMD cause I still love the hell out of AMD. They are still great if you don't have the money to dish out on an Intel setup.Cons:- These CPU's are expensive and if you want the best performance then you will want to buy a top of the line Motherboard to go along with it. So just that alone can cost you $500+- Non that I can think of at the moment besides the money side of things, Like I have said before its been perfect the whole time with no issues other than my wallet was a bit lighter after the purchase. :)Specs on the Build I put together:Intel 4770k i7 3.5Mhz OC @ 4.5MhzMSI GD65 Z87 Gaming MotherboardG.Skill 8gb 2x4gb sticks @ 12800 / 1600MhzNvidia GTX 680 2gb SuperClocked Edition (Already had this)PNY Signature 120gb SSDWD Blue 500gb HD @ 7200rpmAvermedia Live Gamer HD - Capture CardEVGA 650w Gold Rated PSUFractal Design - Define R4 (non-windowed) Case(BTW Best case on the Market!)
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30.6.2014

I have had this processor for a while now and I have to say it is one of the best processors I have used, I came from a AMD fx8350.I have it installed on a Asus z87-a board and it has proven to be a very stable and quick platform.I started with the stock fan but could not resist overclocking it and soon had 4.3gz, then changed to CM Hyper 412s and moved up to 4.4gz. Now I am on a corsair h105 and at 4.6gz and running cool(ish) upto 81c full load(realbench/aida64. mainly I play Borderlands 2 or Diablo 3 and the I7 rarely gets of 60c, however if I was encoding video most of the day I think I would drop down to 4.5gz and reduce the voltage.This I7 only runs hot after 4.4 really when you need to hit it with lots of volts to make it stable and at 4.3 it is cool enough,so I feel it is really a case of common sense and research.I know not all 4770k can run at 4.4 and above (this is not a 1.2v golden chip), but it has been solid and has all the potential I require.However now that the new i7 4790k is out I would really love to put it through as much as my 4770k as see how it compares temp/voltage and workload wise. It could well be that the extra price on the new chip is worth the outlay.The onboard video card is best for web browsing and very undemanding games really, I never intended to use it but did test it, normally I run a Nvida 660ti.It is well worth considering buying decent thermal paste for this I7 you certainly wont be sorry as the stock paste is a poor performer. Something like Artic 5 etc. All in all there really is very little to grumble about esp if you are going to run at stock, install and enjoy 7 -10 years of use or push it and who keeps a system that long anyway :D
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8.7.2013

This is a great successor for Ivy Bridge, mainly with the single-threaded performance improvements, which are definitely noticeable, especially with things like compressing. This chip is overclockable to the 4.4-4.5 levels pretty easily, but I use the H100i to maintain good temps (69-70 degrees at max.), so it is definitely hot, but not as bad as I was expecting and you can get the temps down by 10-15 degrees if you feel that cutting the heat spreader off is worth the risk, (personally, I am not planning on doing it).One criticism that I will have is that this supposedly "flagship" part does not include the new TSX extensions, meaning that you'll loose some of the multi-threaded speed improvements coming down the line,(e.g. GNU C library already has plans to incorporate this). Or, perhaps if you're a developer of some heavy multi-threaded stuff this may not be the part for you. Another thing missing from this -K series part is all the important virtualization extensions, so if you're doing a lot of virtualization you may want to consider the 4770 part instead. To be fair trough, things like KVM and Xen have so little overhead nowdays, that it may not even matter in the end as you can overclock this -K part pretty easily due to its unlocked multiplier and compensate for some of the shortcomings of the -K series with an increased clock frequency.Honestly, I would love to see a -K series part with ALL the new extensions included, but I guess that that could cannibalize Intel's Xeon business and honestly this is a very good investment already as it will likely remain fast enough for the next 2-3 generations of CPUs, so you can justify the cost.
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8.6.2013

Long time AMD fan. Last Intel CPU was Pentium 133Mhz. My last rig bit the dust and i decided to get something that didnt feel "good enough" but that felt like it could do anything, for the next few years. Running Windows 8 on my AMD rig was a chore, in its defense the A75M isnt Win8 certified/approved.My last platform was:A8-3850Asrock A75M8GB Mushkin DDR3 12800 1600MhzAMD 6570 HDMushkin 120GB SSDRosewil Redbone atx casesome 500/550 watt psuBD burnerNew rig (ne items not mentioned are carried from above):i7-4770kCorsair H80i closed loop liquid coolingAsrock Z87 Extreme 416GB Kingston hyperX Beast (2x8GB) 2133Mhz RAMMSI GeForce GTX 660 ti 3GB GDDR5This processor consistently shows about 2x the performance of AMD leading CPU/APU,of course at 2x the cost. ITS WORTH IT. Single thread apps are way faster, and this processor can out-perform an 8 core AMD CPU in multi-threaded apps.Overclocking: I was able to easily get this to 4.4Ghz stable. Some people get upto 4.7/4.8 even 5.0. I guess i got an averagish CPU. Very much luck of the drawl. Could also be MB limitations. Tried 4.6 and couldnt get it to boot. Still 25% overclock isnt bad. With corsair h80i temps at full load barely touch 70 celcius but typically temps are in the 30's-40's. Gaming it touches 50's.Highly recommend. AMD is great if your an average computer user, internet, email, office. If you do any gaming, media encoding, or adobe/advanced productivity there is not an AMD cpu at this time that comes close. Ill follow up after about 6 months, i fully expect to be even happier with it by then.
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1.4.2014

Bought this CPU as part of my new Gaming PC i've built (First build ever). At first I was planning on going for an i5 simply because the performance in games compared to this cpu isn't "Drasticly" different but when it comes to multitasking and video rendering/editing you honestly can't go wrong with this.The stock speed is 3.50GHz like its stated, i've got mine running at a stable overclock of 4.5GHz and it's ridiculously quick. This CPU alongside decent ram, you'll have apps running flawlessly quick, open apps & web pages instantly.My PC:CASE: Corsair 750D Full ATX Windowed CaseMOBO: MSI Z87-GD65 Gaming Motherboard (Originally ordered from Amazon but part didn't arrive so I got a refund.)CPU:i7 4770k @4.5GHzGPU: EVGA Nvidia GTX 780 Ti SC 3GBRAM: Kingston XMP Beast Series 16GB 2400MHz DDR3 RAMSSD: Samsung 840 EVO 250GB SSDHDD: WD 1TBCPU COOLER: Corsair H100i extreme liquid coolerPSU: Corsair AX1200i Professional Series Digital Fully ModularI've got all this running on my Asus VG248QE 24-inch 3D 144Hz LED Monitor to give the super smooth & sharp graphical image.All in all, this CPU is a godsend. Absolutely perfect, runs cool on the H100i, no problems installing it onto the MOBO, chews through everything you throw at it and will still take more... The intergrated graphics is really good too! Can run new games at the 30-50~ FPS mark depending on your graphical settings. I've tested the graphics on games such as World of Warcraft and it can handle it incredibly well. Got constant 80+ FPS with AA on, Shadows and most of the other settings at Ultra settings.
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25.5.2014

I have no words to describe processor a1 (this trivergatario) hipermegagrandemente excellentI have no words to describe processor a1 (this trivergatario) hipermegagrandemente. excellent product that does what they say makes six video I open a movie in hd blur ray and run 4 sets at the same time crises 3 resident evil 6, need for speed hot porsuit. re 5 and second meter usor processor uses only 45% of it. but reaches 70 ° Celsius I'm using only air system. do not think anyone can get you 100% this beast. eye'm just using your hd 4000 graphics card and move all games in 1333x 768 maximum gaming action and glide like butter. best regards to the gamers populationno tengo palabras para describirlo procesadores a1(esta trivergatario) hipermegagrandemente .excelente producto hace lo que dicen que hace puedo abrir 6 video en hd una peli en blur ray y ejecutar 4 juegos al mismo tiempo crisis 3, residente evil 6, need for speed hot porsuit. re 5 y segun el medidor de uso del procesador solo utiliza el 45 % del mismo. pero alcanza los 70° centigrados solo lo estoy usando con sistema de aire. no creo que nadie le pueda sacar el 100% a esta bestia. ojo solo estoy usando su tarjeta grafica hd 4000 y mueve todos los juegos en 1333x 768 en maxima recurso y los juegos se deslizan como mantequilla. saludos cordiales a la poblacion gamers
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31.12.2013

This i7-4770k was the core of my first computer build - so I was ignorant what to expect. I did an external build first to test the motherboard, RAM and processor - everything worked fine but the Intel processor fan above the processor (that came from Intel with the chip). it would not spin without a "push start" and was noisy when it did spin. So I did some reading on Intel processor fans and some reviewers said they were junk - and based on my limited experience I had to agree. I decided to purchase an after market Master Cooler processor fan to replace the stock Intel fan. As I removed the stock Intel processor fan from the motherboard was where I learned my processor fan lesson - look closely at the fan wires.Intel had clipped the wire for the fan's power so tightly to the perimeter of the fan's plastic exterior that it impeded the fan's ability to spin and caused the noise. Intel gives sufficient fan wire length so there was no need for it to be so tight around the fan's perimeter and as soon as I made the wires longer and away from the fan it started quickly and quietly. But I had already taken the time and spent $35 on the Master Cooler fan, so I installed it anyway rather than taking more time to return it. The Master Cooler processor fan (212 Evo) was much bigger than the stock fan but still incredibly quiet.
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20.2.2014

I recently had some extra money to throw around and decided to try Intel from my top end AMD rig, 8350, 16GB Corsair Dominator RAM, GTX 780, 750watt Corsair Modular psu. I am an active forum member on Tomshardware.com and have for over a year watched the debates (and arguments) between AMD and Intel fans regarding cpus. Sick of all the talk I wanted to finally test it for myself, I decided to go for the i7 because I was interested in the comaprison between the 4770k and the 8350, considering the 8350 is much cheaper and older. I went all out on the motherboard as well because I planned on overclocking the 4770k, which I successfully have easily on the Asus Z87 Formula board (amazing board).I got a great chip, 4.4ghz at only 1.2v. Anyways though, how did the 8350 do against the 4770k? Amazing actually the only realworld difference I've noticed was that the few games I do play seemed smoother for sure. I ran some benchmarks and the i7 is significantly more powerful in most synthetic tests like Cinebench, 3dmark. It also does have much higher minimum fps in many games I play after I ran FRAPS, which was obviously why it seemed much smoother than my 8350. Overall, not really worth the money spent but I am happy I now have the extra power and smoother gameplay.
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6.9.2013

I didn't purchase my 4770k from Amazon but have one powering my rig..I bought this chip as soon as it launched and was a bit nervous at some of the negative reviews thst came out at the time. Some reviewers felt that this new chip was not the "all bells and whistles" that Intel had claimed it would be. A revelation for the mobile market - but - could do better for the desktop series. In my opinion since running this chip OC'd on an air-cooled-system I have been really happy with it's performance and have had it clocked up to 4.6 on around 1.3v. Nothing to shout about for you liquid cooler users - but it runs at a stable pace with no choking and apart from the early days when I had my cooling system badly set-up - NO BSD.The highest temp I have gone to has been 72c whilst benching on Prime. Not a CPU expert but when running productivity tools like Adobe Premiere - I really notice the difference from my previous PC (Mac).The reason I dropped a star is that friends of mine that have also bought this chip have not had such happy times and struggle to get a 4.2 - 4.4 OC. It truley is a lottery and congratulations if you get the winning ticket. BTW - W/C enthusiasts have had this chip running @ 5ghz stable.
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31.12.2013

Yes, it's intel and it's probably overpriced, but the way I see it is that it is affordable. I've recently built a desktop PC, with this processor and it all came to about £1000. For the performance to price ratio, this is the best build that I could have gotten.The processor is very fast. I mainly use it for working with Maya and Mudbox, and it's rendering 4x faster than my old laptop with first generation i5 dual core processor. Also other factors come in mind when it comes to this such as RAM, but considering that I've only paid £300 more than my laptop, I'm more than happy.The processor has 4 physical cores, but it has 8 logical processors.It takes 10 seconds to boot my PC with no SSD on Windows 8.1,and I've got to test it out on Windows 7 at some point.Also overclocking is as easy as ever with this processor on the right motherboard and cooling system. Right now I'm running at 4.3 GHz, compared to the stock 3.5GHz with NO issues whatsoever. It is actually running cooler than stock temp due to the right configuration.Overall, I am very happy for the price-performance ratio. It is definitely the high end gaming/workstation level processor.
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14.3.2014

Replacing an aging AMD chip this was a nice surprise. Even running at the stock speed of 3.5mhz it is quick. The on board graphics are not much to write home about and I disabled these and removed all Intel graphic drivers as they conflicted with the AMD R280X drivers causing a big delay booting. After that however it boots quickly and I have played with overclocking using the Gigabyte Z87x- UD4H motherboard but to be honest even with the most demanding of games the "Heaven" and 3D Mark Benchmarks are 70-80% better than most even at stock speeds so I have reset it 3.5mhz. Is it quicker than AMD 6 core and 8 core chips. Well it depends on what you use it for and what graphics card you have.Any multiple core chip allied to the best card you can afford will give excellent results. In hindsight I could have saved money getting an AMD 8 Core processor and it would have been cheaper and worked just as well but I made the choice as an experiment and happy to live with the results. The one thing, and this applies to AMD as well. Get a decent cooler that is silent. Even at full load the processor is still ticking over at 48 degrees c.
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