System Setup
Test System |
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Processor: | Intel Core i7-4770K (Ivy Bridge, 6 MB Cache) Intel Core i7-3770K (Ivy Bridge, 8 MB Cache) Intel Core i5-3570K (Ivy Bridge, 6 MB Cache) |
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Motherboard: | Asus Z87-C (1150 Socket) Intel Z87 Asrock Z77 OC Formula (1155 Socket) Intel Z77 |
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Graphics Processors: | MSI GTX 650 Ti Boost 2GB Pe/OC |
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Memory: | 2x 4096 MB Corsair Platinum PC3-21300 DDR3 @ 2400 MHz 9-11-11-24 |
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Harddisk: | Corsair Neutron 64 GB SSD |
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Power Supply: | Corsair AX1200i Platinum |
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Software: | Windows 7 64-bit Service Pack 1 |
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Drivers: | NVIDIA: 320.18 WHQL
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Display: | LG Flatron E2260" 1920x1080 |
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Overclocking
Overclocking the new Haswell series is a bit different than overclocking an Ivy Bridge CPU.
Users have the ability to breach the BCLK limit of around 106-107 MHz on Ivy Bridge, making a frequency of 130 MHz a real possibility, which has as an effect on higher memory frequency as well.
Like before, the frequency is determined by BCLK (Base Clock) x Multiplier; 35x100 MHz for the stock speed of 3.5 GHz or 39x100 MHz for 3.9 GHz with the help of Intel's Boost technology.
For our tests, we overclocked by adjusting the bclock in order to force a multiplier of x35. The maximum we achieved was 120MHz with a voltage of 1.2 V.
We would have liked more than 4.5 GHz out of that chip, but it did not like the voltage.
Here is the maximum frequency we got: