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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  • Rajinder Gill - Friday, May 28, 2010 - link

    Hi,

    The actual "break point" is at 3.962GHz to be precise. A 9W step to 3.986GHz, followed by a 11w step to 4.009GHz. Anything higher than this and I'm loading up at 85C (according to DTS) and I can't get Linpack stable. I've extended x to show the 4.009GHz point. We'll endeavour to plot some more curves featuring some of the parts you mention if time allows.

    Thanks!
    Raja
  • Spenny2112 - Friday, May 28, 2010 - link

    This only further confirms the change that the pc industry will be undergoing in the near future.
  • Interitus - Friday, May 28, 2010 - link

    Why does this make any sense on the 1156 platform? Intel created 2 different platforms, 1366 enthusiast and 1156 mainstream. Why is this on 1156 and not on 1366? Does that make any sense since 1366 is supposed to be the enthusiast/OC/hardcore version?

    Keep in mind I'm not arguing the viability of either socket. I'm just saying that Intel designed 1366 to be the high end, so why do this for the low end, but keep the unlocked chips for 1366 at $1k?
  • blandead - Friday, May 28, 2010 - link

    1 reason that comes to mind first... $$$$$$
    2 this isn't targeted toward the enthusiast overclocker

    the ones buying 1366 don't need unlocked multipliers to reach 4ghz or 1800+mhz ram speed.

    I'm an AMD fanboy and my friend bought an i7 930 and 2000mhz ram and asked me to overclock it. I've never played with an i7 before, but surprisingly it was easy as cake to get it to 4.1ghz and 1850mhz ram on air and still have QPI overclocked past 6.4 dont quite remember i dont use the i7. Point is, with those achievements on a 930 I don't see a need for unlocked multiplier or k series.
  • TheBLK - Friday, May 28, 2010 - link

    So why the messing BLK ????
  • geokilla - Friday, May 28, 2010 - link

    That's a huge jump in power consumption... But then these are engineering samples. I hope the retail ones will be better.
  • Jamahl - Friday, May 28, 2010 - link

    "This is another of those situations where we’ve had to make an eleventh-hour conference call with Intel to work out what and who these processors are aimed at."

    How about you make your own minds up instead?

    First Anand did it with the awful clarkdale now you are doing it with these similarly awful cpu's. If intel gives you shit, TELL US ITS SHIT. Take a look around the web and see how poorly these cpu's were received elsewhere.

    My respect for AT is at an all time low - there is no longer any pretence that you aren't an intel shill.
  • Hrel - Friday, May 28, 2010 - link

    But it's about F***ing time!
  • zodiacfml - Friday, May 28, 2010 - link

    simply, the new unlocked chips does not offer real advantages compared to their siblings except for dynamic overclocking and the one posted which is little better turboboost speeds.
    yet, the additional cost compared to the performance of AMD's black edition processors is not that reasonable.
  • sergiu - Saturday, May 29, 2010 - link

    It would have been nice if we could see the power consumption when dual cascade cooling has been used (both in stock and overclocking). I'm interested to see the leakage scalling with temperature!

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