Wednesday, July 25th 2018

Intel Core i9 8-core LGA1151 Processor Could Get Soldered IHS, Launch Date Revealed

The fluid thermal interface material between the processor die and the IHS (integrated heatspreader) has been a particularly big complaint of PC enthusiasts in recent times, especially given that AMD has soldered IHS (believed to be more effective in heat-transfer), across its Ryzen processor line. We're getting reports of Intel planning to give at least its top-dog Core i9 "Whiskey Lake" 8-core socket LGA1151 processor a soldered IHS. The top three parts of this family have been detailed in our older article.

The first Core i9 "Whiskey Lake" SKU is the i9-9900K, an 8-core/16-thread chip clocked between 3.60~5.00 GHz, armed with 16 MB of L3 cache. The introduction of the Core i9 extension to the mainstream desktop segment could mean Intel is carving out a new price point for this platform that could be above the $300-350 price traditionally held by top Core i7 "K" SKUs from the previous generations. In related news, we are also hearing that the i9-9900K could be launched as early as 1st August, 2018. This explains why motherboard manufacturers are in such hurry to release BIOS updates for their current 300-series chipset motherboards.
Source: Coolaler
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79 Comments on Intel Core i9 8-core LGA1151 Processor Could Get Soldered IHS, Launch Date Revealed

#76
R-T-B
hatSmaller dies have been soldered in the past. According to our own database, the C2D E6600 was even smaller than Ivy Bridge, and it was soldered.
That pretty much proves it's just Intel being cheap and not "technical reasons" doesn't it?
MxPhenom 216Who fucking cares about solder. The solder vs TIM debate is a dead horse that people are obsessed with beating every time a new chip comes out. Not to mention people lacking technical understanding for why chips weren't being soldered. And its not really a money grab.
This thread shows the only people lacking technical understanding are those defending paste for "technical reasons" that don't really exist as a limiting factor. So yes it is a cash grab.

And that irks a lot of people.
Posted on Reply
#77
hat
Enthusiast
R-T-BThat pretty much proves it's just Intel being cheap and not "technical reasons" doesn't it?
Well, it at least shoots down the theory that they can't be soldered because they're too small.
Posted on Reply
#78
R-T-B
hatWell, it at least shoots down the theory that they can't be soldered because they're too small.
Yeah, good point. I guess there COULD be another reason yet, but I certainly can't think of one.
Posted on Reply
#79
hat
Enthusiast
If I have it right, I saw someone say once it was put there purposely so that the chips wouldn't run too cool. They're designed to run hot so they wind up throttling before exceeding normal power limits.



Not a fan of that idea, either... if the chips truly need to run hot so they can throttle so they don't fry themselves, then that's piss poor design. Also, we would probably be hearing reports of a lot of exploding overclocked Coffee Lake chips...
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