Friday, May 23rd 2014

Multiplier-Unlocked Pentium G3258, Core i7-4790K and Core i5-4690K Listed

Several online retailers began listing Intel's next wave of unlocked socket LGA1150 processors, ahead of their June 2014 launches. Among these are the Core i7-4790K, the Core i5-4690K, and the Pentium G3258. The series begins with the i7-4790K and the i5-4690K, which bear an exclusive codename, "Devil's Canyon." These are special hand-picked "Haswell" dies that feature higher voltage limits, and a higher-grade package, with special high-current LGA contact points, and a superior thermal interface material between the die and integrated heatspreader (IHS).

The i7-4790K is a quad-core chip, featuring HyperThreading (8 logical CPUs), HD 4600 graphics, 8 MB of L3 cache, and clock speeds of 4.10 GHz, with Turbo Boost frequencies of a staggering 4.40 GHz. The i5-4690K, on the other hand, is a quad-core chip that lacks HyperThreading, and features 6 MB of L3 cache, but respectable clock speeds of 3.50 GHz, with 3.90 GHz Turbo Boost. Both chips feature unlocked base-clock multipliers, support for higher memory frequencies, uncore clocks, etc. The Core i7-4790K is priced around US $370, on the stores it's up for pre-order. The i5-4690K, on the other hand, is listed around $250.
The surprise package here is the new Pentium G3258, which is an "unlocked" chip. The rationale behind launching such a sub-$100 unlocked chip, could have been the fact that 2014 marks the 20th anniversary of Intel's iconic Pentium brand, which made it a household name. The G3258 is based on the "Haswell" silicon, and is a dual-core chip that lacks HyperThreading, Turbo Boost, and AVX instruction-set. It still offers a respectable clock speed of 3.20 GHz, and 3 MB of L3 cache. The chip is priced around $80.
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55 Comments on Multiplier-Unlocked Pentium G3258, Core i7-4790K and Core i5-4690K Listed

#51
GC_PaNzerFIN
btarunrI didn't hear the CEO say "Devil's Canyon." Core i7-4790 (non-K) is "Haswell Refresh," and very much supported on 8-series chipset motherboards. That wasn't my contention. It was "Devil's Canyon," which isn't the same product (enhanced die, different package, different on-package electricals, different TIM, etc.)
What do you mean "enhanced die" or different on-package electricals? Source?

All I hear is binned ASIC, better TIM and better package. Nothing more.

Btw Devil's Canyon is Haswell Refresh part. K-series unlocked one.
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#52
TheHunter
btarunrI didn't hear the CEO say "Devil's Canyon." Core i7-4790 (non-K) is "Haswell Refresh," and very much supported on 8-series chipset motherboards. That wasn't my contention. It was "Devil's Canyon," which isn't the same product (enhanced die, different package, different on-package electricals, different TIM, etc.)
Well nvm DC for a second :), I was showing that video regarding Broadwell back in September 2013, guess he didnt know about DC yet or they didnt have any plans for it at that time.



Now in March 2014 Intel said they used DC name because next 4th gen didnt sound so good and they decided to name it DC (even had a voting contest) while its still same old Haswell underneath with yeah better thermals. They used Z97 to pair them so it wouldnt look so empty with just a new cpu.


Then someone asked will Broadwell be compatible with both z87 & z97, she repeated his question and was about to confirm it, but the stuttered and asked her team, I think she knew the answer all along, but didnt want to make a scene.
I mean why would that Intel CEO said Broadwell will work on both back in 2013 and now all the sudden not anymore..

Imo they need to sell them new z97 chipsets after all or there would be mass market overflow with sata express & m2 and they dont want that..



For current C2Q etc users its a perfect time to upgrade now, no doubt.
I was in the same boat last year still had a Q9450 for over 4years but I just couldnt wait any longer.


It would be nice if I could stick in Broadwell K, but this 4770k @ 4.7ghz looks overkill for the next 2-3years anyway :D


Skylake DT with DDR4 and Z100 chipset seems like a more reasonable upgrade in the distant future.
Posted on Reply
#53
TheHunter
Ok not really OT but anyway,

ladies and Gentlemen I give you Haswell-E, 8 core only for X version...
Posted on Reply
#54
Roboyt0
The temperatures for Ivy and Haswell are actually not due to poor thermal paste. Delidding the CPU reduces temperatures because it eliminates the gap, caused by the glue, between the IHS and the CPU die. Intel's thermal paste is actually a fair performer, beating Noctua NT-H1 in the post found below.

forums.anandtech.com/showpost.php?p=34053183&postcount=566

Sandy Bridge performed so well because solder was used between the CPU die and IHS. People who upgrade to Coolaboratory Liquid Pro/Ultra, liquid metal thermal material, get temps similar to Sandy Bridge on their Ivy/Haswell chips. Haswell will always run hotter due to the voltage regulators, this can't be changed.

It will be interesting to see what trick Intel has up their sleeve for Devil's Canyon...hopefully they don't use a name like that and let everyone down.
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#55
Aquinus
Resident Wat-man
TheHunterOk not really OT but anyway,

ladies and Gentlemen I give you Haswell-E, 8 core only for X version...
I'm glad that they're introducing a lower cost 6-core CPU but I don't like the gimped PCI-E root hub and the lack of a 4c/8t option. Despite everyone wanting more cores, I think that for most people a 4c CPU would be fine and if the only real reason you're getting the platform is for the PCI-E lanes, you're getting seriously screwed.
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