- Joined
- Jul 7, 2014
- Messages
- 152 (0.04/day)
- Location
- Columbia, SC
Processor | Intel 2500k OCed at 4.6ghz |
---|---|
Motherboard | Intel Z77 |
Cooling | Thermalright Macho Rev.A |
Memory | 8GB G.Skill 2133 |
Video Card(s) | Gigabyte GTX 670 Windforce 3X OCed at 1050mhz base and 1600mhz vram |
Storage | Mushkin Enhance 256gb SSD, Western Digital 750gb and 3TB HHDs |
Display(s) | Asus 24" 1080p |
Case | Lian-Li Mid Tower |
Audio Device(s) | Mobo sound |
Power Supply | SeaSonic 560 watt gold |
Mouse | Logitec 3 button laser mouse |
Keyboard | Das Keyboard Model S (the blank key model) |
Software | Windows 8.1 64 bit |
nice? that will be like a dream
so if a brave i5 can handle just imagine what an i7 of sandy and Ivy can do?
Is not worth enough to replace your current Sandy or Ivy Bridge unit for a broadwell one, mostly on gaming an OCed i5 2500K can handle all what you will do with a new processor, we recommend people o buy haswell for new builds because availability and also opportunity, prices between brand new sandies, ivys and haswell are not so big, so for a couple of dollars more getting recent units is a solid unit.
Also for work and light work the old intel Core 2 Quad are brave units, I have a previous gen Intel i7 for work and hard work, also it is crunching too, so we can add Lynnfield to our veterans list,
Lynnfield, Sandy Bridge and Ivy Bridge are brave enough for a couple of years more of gaming, working and whatever you want,
I was the original "OCed 2500k can handle anything" poster. Nothing i currently use my PC for (Battlefield 4/Hardline, Rome: Total War 2, GIMP) is bottlenecked by the 2500k (especially at 4.6ghz, on air) at 1080p. 2500K... great CPU... or greatest CPU?
the GTX670 on the other hand? Yep, once the Freesync/G-Sync 1440 monitors drop below $500, that will get replaced.
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