Tuesday, November 29th 2016

Leaked Intel Core i7-7700K Sample Tested

The team over at Tom's Hardware have gotten their hands on Intel's new 'Kaby Lake' CPU - The Core i7-7700K. While the chip is not marked as an engineering sample, they cannot confirm with confidence that it is a retail part. They then did what we all hoped and expected, they put the new i7 through a series of benchmarks both at its stock speeds and overclocked. Without a retail Z270 series motherboard to test with, Kaby Lake compatible firmware was loaded onto their Gigabyte GA-Z170X-Ultra Gaming board.

In line with what has been reported so far, the stock clock speeds of their sample was 4.20GHz base and 4.50GHz max turbo boost with a TDP of 95W, up marginally from the i7-6700K's 91W. As tested the 7700K drew slightly more power under load than the 6700K whilst achieving benchmark results that are more-or-less in line with the percentage clock speed increase. Using the same core voltage for overclocking, the 7700K was able to manage a 4.8GHz overclock at 1.3v where the 6700K achieved 4.6GHz. As Intel did not change the core micro architecture between Skylake and Kaby Lake, it appears that save for HEVC and VP9 8/10-bit encode/decode and other possible features we may not yet know of, slightly faster clock speeds is the principal improvement. Given this is a pre-release test conducted on a motherboard that may not be able to unleash the full potential of the i7-7700K, the results should be taken with their appropriate pinch of salt. For the article and detailed findings, please follow the source link.
Source: Tom's Hardware
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31 Comments on Leaked Intel Core i7-7700K Sample Tested

#26
arterius2
bubbleawsomeIt seems like this chip will need a delid or a really good cooler. A guy over at anandtech got something similar though, so it seems like the 7700k will handle high 4s to a 5Ghz OC pretty well, if you're comfortable with a voltage that's pretty high.
Is it me or is tech going backwards? Considering I was easily OCing my 2600K back in the days @ 5ghz on air. And still keeping temp to around 85C
Posted on Reply
#27
deu
DivergeHey, at least we only need to upgrade CPUs every 4-5 years now... if AMD was competitive, maybe things would be different.
If trolls went trolls they would know that AMD is releasing Zen in Q1 2017!
Posted on Reply
#28
Nihilus
This is like the Pentium 4 all over again. Just crank up the speed a bit for a massive hike in heat and power consumption. For those old enough to remember, there were bigger gains going from the Core 2 duo E6700 to the E6750, which was just a small FSB increase:
techreport.com/review/12737/intel-core-2-duo-e6750-processor

That was more of a 2nd 'Tock' than this thing.
Posted on Reply
#29
ratirt
Hmm. I've read the article and I don't know if I should laugh or cry. (when I thought about it laugh is adequate). Really I see no improvement but total deterioration. I always thought that having a next gen will bring something new to the table. event if intel was giving 1% more that was still more. But giving less as an improvement? That's just ridiculous.
Posted on Reply
#30
Vario
rkaaIs it finally time to upgrade my i7 3770K?
The 7700K is exactly 4000 better.
Posted on Reply
#31
jaggerwild
when did this site start valuing anything out of Tomhardware?
Posted on Reply
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