Ok, so we got a little carried away on the Clarkdale stuff. Time to give the i7-875K a look-see. After all, it’s probably the bigger story of the K-series release given it offers more overclocking features and a similar stock clock speed to the more expensive i7-870.

No beating around on this one, we started off with watercooling:

click to enlarge
 
Things are fine up to 3.7GHz, but any higher and things soon get out of hand. CPUs like these are fine if you need a stock runner, or are looking for a basic overclock, although this kind of performance is easily available from the cheaper i7-860.
 

Without water-cooling, there isn’t much headroom at all - at least not on this sample. Our i7-870 ES manages 4.4GHz, pulling 201 Watts during Linpack. The 875-K is already at 193 watts, and it has barely broken 4GHz.  Past 3.9GHz, we’re already looking at a 10W increase in power consumption for every 20 MHz rise in CPU frequency - let’s just say that this did not encourage us to push any further. Well, that’s not completely true because we did try it out under our cascades. Unfortunately, things are pretty bad in the sub-zero realms, too. The substrate can’t handle more than 1.35Vcore when cooled below -70 Celsius, making it a difficult chip to control and one that’s ultimately limited in headroom. The best we managed was a run of Vantage at 4.5GHz, which really isn’t worth bragging about.

i5-655K Meets a Cold Snap Final Words
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  • Ph0b0s - Friday, May 28, 2010 - link

    Not covered so much on these websites but I slurged on an I7 965 when I7's were new, becuase it was unlocked, even though I knew it did not have any extra head room than the cheap chips in the family. The reason I did this was so that I could use the I7's new turbo feature to overclock on demand instead of having to use static timings to overclock. With unlocked I7's and the right motherboard you can change the value of the turbo mulipliers to be more than just one or two steps.

    So for my chip if I have all 4 cores in use my turbo muliplier is set to x29 (3800 ghz, only using factory voltages at the moment) and higher amounts when less cores are in use. So when not doing anything my CPU clocks itself to 1.6 GHz and runs at 3.2 GHz if not doing too much and then clocks itself to 3.8GHz when extra power is needed.

    So I really welcome Intel putting out these cheaper unlocked CPU's, as next time when I want to overclock using the turbo funtionality I won't have to fork out for an Extreme Edition again.

    Also I would love to see more coverage of this type of overclocking that it is new with the Nathelems, Before it was only the I7 Extreme Edition chips that could do it, but now that are more options avaliable, maybe Anandtech could do an article taking about it.
  • Death666Angel - Friday, May 28, 2010 - link

    Hello guys!
    I was really looking forward to Intel -K material. But the whole bunch of "i5 540" is more than an annoyance. It is downright embarrassing and I would urge you to re-read any future texts, as I am really not interested in reading stuff when so little time is put into the text. Really a shame since the content is looking good.
  • Rajinder Gill - Friday, May 28, 2010 - link

    Sorry, blame me for that. Those skipped under the radar this morning.

    -Raja
  • Griswold - Friday, May 28, 2010 - link

    If you wonder why Intel does this, it most likely boils down to two letters: BE. They were never priced as if they came straight out of Absurdistan. And perhaps Intel felt a little itch because of that...
  • Maroon - Friday, May 28, 2010 - link

    ^^^we have a winner!
  • DanNeely - Friday, May 28, 2010 - link

    Where are you getting those numbers from? Software or are you using hardware to measure it directly off the mobo itself?
  • Rajinder Gill - Friday, May 28, 2010 - link

    Hardware measured using a clamp meter.

    Raja
  • DanNeely - Sunday, May 30, 2010 - link

    So you were measuring the current going into the mobo via the 4/8pin 12V cpu power cable?
  • Rajinder Gill - Monday, May 31, 2010 - link

    Yes.
  • DanNeely - Tuesday, June 1, 2010 - link

    Did you also monitor the main ATX power connector to see if there was any increase in power draw there when overclocking?

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