Core i7 4790K Processor 5.0 GHz Review - A Silicon Lottery

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The 4790K Silicon lottery - 1st Try

For our testing purposes we used the all new ASUS SaberTooth Mark S Limited Edition (review here). Cooling wise things remain a little tough, I means the Haswell generation processors are a bit of a bitch to cool once you increase voltages. We use the Corsair H110 – a AIO kit that is commonly used yet offers very decent performance.

 

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We enabled our XMP profile at 2133 MHz for the memory, and applied the settings as aforementioned in our BIOS. Instantly we booted into windows, and to see 5 GHz for the first time, yeah that does bring a smile upon your face.

 

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The initial tests show complete stability, though temps are high, really high. To adapt to that in the next phase we'll try and see if we can get voltages down a tiny notch so that we can better deal with the produced heat. I mean hey, this is only a Corsair H110 AIO cooler kit we are using. 

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The first try easily passed a 1m Wprime run. After a little more tweaking we noticed a couple of things:

  1. We purchased a 5.0 GHz processor and indeed it is 100% stable at 5 GHz, 5.1 GHz would boot as well, but did not remain stable no matter what we tried voltages wise.
  2. CPU Core Voltage - You will have a bit of playroom voltages wise. At 5 GHz we can still boot at 1.30 Volts but stability became an issue. We needed to settle at 1.35 Volts for complete stability. That is a notch lower then we purchased, which is great.
  3. CPU VCCIN (Processor input voltage ) – here you will find a notch more bandwidth to play with. We found that the recommended 1.97 V was not needed. Lowering VCCIN to 1.90 Volts resulted into a perfectly fine input voltage while consuming less power and producing less heat.

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