Power Consumption

With the two Kaby Lake-X processors, the main comparison for power consumption is going to be against their Kaby Lake-S counterparts on the mainstream platform. For an extra 100 MHz, Intel is moving from a 95W TDP to a 112W TDP, indicating that these processors will need better cooling – but when we tested KBL-S we were rather surprised by the power, especially on the Core i5.

Power: Total Package (1T)

Power: Total Package (Full Load)

The Core i5-7640X almost perfectly matches up with its Core i5 counterparts, even beating the Core i5-7600K in every situation but especially at load. For users who want to overclock near to the official TDP, it looks like there’s some headroom (other circumstances permitting). The Core i7-7740X is noticeably more power hungry at full load, hitting 79W, but lower than the Core i7-7700K at 87W.

Overclocking to 5.0 GHz

One of the elements promoted at the launch of Basin Falls was overclockability: Intel ran a private invite-only extreme overclocking workshop with sub-zero coolants that week, which was then followed by ASUS and GIGABYTE both stepping it up another gear by using liquid helium rather than liquid nitrogen. For some of these chips, the colder the better, and liquid helium is going to be limit for cooling (and cost) as there is inherent difficulty in using sub-zero coolants for records.

Those sub-zero events for records are just on single benchmarks, or single frequency records, and are not meant to be run at those speeds all day every day. This makes the air and water overclocking potential of the CPUs more important for regular users and enthusiasts.

When Kaby Lake-S was launched, we saw good overclocking performance on the Core i7-7700K: our set of 4.2 GHz base processors reached a range between 4.6 to 4.8 GHz, arguably giving a 8-15% overclock and given some of the numbers we had seen in the wild, the consistency between the processors meant that most of the 7700K CPUs could reach that amount. One of the reasons for such good performance on these CPUs was that Intel had incorporated a new feature for overclocking, the AVX offset. This allows overclockers to reduce the frequency that AVX code runs at, as this can be a limiting factor when it comes to a stable overclock. This feature is in Kaby Lake-X as well.

The end result is that the Core i7-7740X went one further in our testing, and hit 5.0 GHz all-cores at 1.25V, and completed our CPU testing suite with a -10 AVX offset. We went for 5.1 GHz all-core, up to 1.35 volts, but the temperatures were getting high and the system was still not stable. 5.0 GHz is a very respectable result, even if we only have a sample of one.

The results at 5.0 GHz are as follows. Gain is absolute for the benchmark for the 5.0 GHz value, with anything within 2.0% listed in orange. Green indicates a win for the faster chip.

Comparison: Intel Core i7-7740X at Stock vs 5 GHz
4.3 GHz Base
4.5 GHz Turbo
Auto AVX
  5.0 GHz Base
5.0 GHz Turbo
4.0 GHz AVX
Score / Time Web Benchmarks Score / Time Gain
135 ms Sunspider 133 ms +1.6%
622 ms Kraken 642 ms -3.1%
45485 Octane 45279 -0.5%
561 WebXPRT15 570 +1.5%
  System Tests    
2229 ms PDF Opening 2055 ms +8.5%
46.172 s FCAT 45.656 s +1.1%
1287 3DPM 2.1 1429 +11.0%
282 s Dolphin v5 280 s +0.7%
891.56 s Agisoft Total 830.06 s +7.4%
  Rendering    
2474593 Corona 2660002 +7.5%
436 s Blender 485 s -10.1%
195 Cinebench 15 ST 215 +10.6%
986 Cinebench 15 MT 1084 +10.0%
  Encoding    
27433 7-zip 29433 +8.9%
48.698 s WinRAR 46.633 s +4.4%
5.5 GB/s AES 6.2 GB/s +12.7%
25.2 FPS Handbrake HEVC 22.6 FPS -10.2%
  Office Tests    
4878 PCMark8 Creative 5084 +4.2%
4844 PCMark8 Home 5071 +4.7%
4110 PCMark8 Work 3984 +3.2%
19.45 per day Chrome Compile 17.70 per day -9.0%
  GTX 1080    
72.56 FPS 1080p Ashes Av 76.19 FPS +4.8%
53.95 FPS 1080p Ashes 99% 55.45 FPS +2.7%
62.30 FPS 4K Ashes Av 63.46 FPS +1.8%
41.24 FPS 4K Ashes 99% 40.79 FPS -1.1%
103.66 FPS 1080p RoTR-1 Av 106.9 FPS +3.0%
85.14 FPS 1080p RoTR-1 99% 85.88 FPS +0.9%
61.60 FPS 4K RoTR-1 Av 61.33 FPS -0.4%
50.25 FPS 4K RoTR-1 99% 50.43 FPS +0.3%

There are a few obvious trends, and a couple of red flags. Most benchmarks split themselves into two groups: benchmarks with a heavy CPU component tend to get a 4-12% gain when overclocked, and those that require a lot of DRAM involvement or AVX tend to be in the 2% region. The red flags are the three big 9-10% loss values for CPU heavy benchmarks, Blender, Handbrake HEVC and Chrome Compilation.

All three benchmarks are sizable workloads with sustained high frequencies throughout, and have heavy AVX components as well. The 4.0 GHz setting for AVX could account for most of that difference, however other AVX benchmarks in our testing (Corona, Cinebench, elements of PCMark, Agisoft) do not have the same effect. The only real difference here is time: the amount of time each benchmark stays at a sustained load.

The three that had the biggest dips are our longest benchmarks: Blender at 8 minutes, Handbrake HEVC at 25 minutes, and the Chrome Compile at over an hour. In this case it seems we are hitting thermal limits for the power delivery, as explained by Igor Wallossek over at Tom's Hardware. He tested an upcoming theory that the early X299 boards are not up to the task for cooling VRMs at heavy load, and through analysis he determined that this was likely to occur in heavily overclocked scenarios. His data showed that the Skylake systems he tested, when overclocked, would hit thermal limits, come back down, and then ramp up again in a cyclical manner. He tested Skylake-X, which draws a lot more power overclocked than our KBL-X setup here, so it likely isn't affecting our setup as much, but still enough for certain benchmarks. I fully suspect we will see second-wave X299 motherboards with substantial heatsinks on the power delivery to overcome this.

More testing is needed, especially in upcoming X299 motherboard reviews. We used an early X299 prototype for our CPU testing here, and a Gaming 9 motherboard on the GPU tests (which showed little variation and no problems). We did take power numbers for this setup but when looking back on the results, they seemed off so we need to go back and re-test those.

Gaming Performance: Grand Theft Auto (1080p, 4K) Conclusion: The Fastest for Serial Workloads
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  • Ian Cutress - Monday, July 24, 2017 - link

    *As specifically written down on that page and mentioned in the explanation for that benchmark*, GeoThermal Valley at 1080p on the GTX 1080 seems incredibly optimized: all the Core i5 chips do so much better than all the other chips.
  • lixindiyi - Monday, July 24, 2017 - link

    The frequency of Ryzen 7 1700 should be 3.0/3.7 GHz.
  • Integr8d - Monday, July 24, 2017 - link

    "After several years of iterative updates, slowly increasing core counts and increasing IPC, we have gotten used to being at least one generation of microarchitecture behind the mainstream consumer processor families. There are many reasons for this, including enterprise requirements for long support platforms as well as enterprise update cycles."

    You forgot 'milking their consumer, enthusiast and enterprise markets'...
  • Arbie - Monday, July 24, 2017 - link

    Ian! You're a Brit - please help defend our common language. You meant to say "raises the question". "Begs the question" is totally different and does not even approximate what you intended.

    Journos: You don't have to understand "begs the question" because you'll very rarely need it. If you mean "raises the question" then just use that - plain English.
  • Mayank Singh - Monday, July 24, 2017 - link

    Can someone explain how could the i5's could have got better performance than the i7 at 1080p?
  • Ian Cutress - Monday, July 24, 2017 - link

    Geothermal Valley on RoTR seems to be optimized for 1080p on a GTX 1080 and overly so, giving a lot more performance on that specific setup and test.
  • Icehawk - Monday, July 24, 2017 - link

    How is that possible? The i5 has slower clocks and less cache. So how can it be faster, "optimization" isn't valid here IMO unless I am missing something.

    I think you have a throttling issue or something else that needs to be examined. Monitoring long term clocks and temps is something that you need to look at incorporating if only to help validate results.
  • lucam - Monday, July 24, 2017 - link

    When are you guys doing the iPad Pro review?
  • dgz - Monday, July 24, 2017 - link

    I remember a time when AT used to be a trustworthy. Who are you fulling, Ian? No one, that's who. Shame on you.
  • Ian Cutress - Monday, July 24, 2017 - link

    I've been called an AMD shill and an Intel shill in the space of two weeks. Fun, isn't it.

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