Now that we’ve got a couple of baselines out of the way using Intel’s stock heat-sink, it’s time to peg thermals back a bit on and see how the i5-655K substrate responds to lower load temperatures:

Switching over to our water-cooling loop decreases load temperature deltas by up to 35 degrees Celsius on this sample (as reported by on-die DTS). The upshot of this is seen quite clearly in the graph - lower load temperatures decrease processor power consumption at equivalent frequencies due to a positive temperature co-efficient (the hotter the CPU runs the more power it leaks - all else being equal). With the end result being that we’re able to boost our previous 3.77GHz stock VID overclock using the stock Intel cooler by almost 200MHz to 3.953GHz.

The improved thermal dissipation allows us to ramp voltages and takes us all the way to 4.55GHz before we hit the wall of diminishing returns. The demands on voltage ramping past this point are such that we start to see a minimum 5~10  watt rise in power consumption for every 20MHz increase in frequency. Also note, that we’re about 40MHz away from doubling up on stock processor power consumption; 4.25GHz seems to be the sensible operating point, coming in at 16 Watts over stock power draw to VCC and VTT with a 900MHz boost in full-load core frequency - and that’s with all performance related domains overclocked.

Better than our i3-540 for Overclocking? i3-540 vs. i5-655K vs. i5-661
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  • ehume - Friday, October 8, 2010 - link

    I finally got around to getting the 875k. Using the brand new Real Temp 3.60, I can now adjust the Turbo Boost multipliers so that under load all four cores go to 30x. That means with a bclk of 134MHz I now see a cpu clock range from 1206MHz on idle to 4020MHz on load. Nice.

    But Intel advertised an adjustable memory multiplier as well. Since my memory is rated at DDR3-2000 I would like to push it beyond the 1608MHz that 12x134 allows. So, is it possible to push the memory multiplier beyond 12x? Does the 875k have that in it?

    I have checked a number of reviews and found nothing other than a repetition of Intel's statements that the memory multiplier is unlocked. Well, is it?

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