- Joined
- Jan 5, 2006
- Messages
- 18,584 (2.68/day)
System Name | AlderLake |
---|---|
Processor | Intel i7 12700K P-Cores @ 5Ghz |
Motherboard | Gigabyte Z690 Aorus Master |
Cooling | Noctua NH-U12A 2 fans + Thermal Grizzly Kryonaut Extreme + 5 case fans |
Memory | 32GB DDR5 Corsair Dominator Platinum RGB 6000MT/s CL36 |
Video Card(s) | MSI RTX 2070 Super Gaming X Trio |
Storage | Samsung 980 Pro 1TB + 970 Evo 500GB + 850 Pro 512GB + 860 Evo 1TB x2 |
Display(s) | 23.8" Dell S2417DG 165Hz G-Sync 1440p |
Case | Be quiet! Silent Base 600 - Window |
Audio Device(s) | Panasonic SA-PMX94 / Realtek onboard + B&O speaker system / Harman Kardon Go + Play / Logitech G533 |
Power Supply | Seasonic Focus Plus Gold 750W |
Mouse | Logitech MX Anywhere 2 Laser wireless |
Keyboard | RAPOO E9270P Black 5GHz wireless |
Software | Windows 11 |
Benchmark Scores | Cinebench R23 (Single Core) 1936 @ stock Cinebench R23 (Multi Core) 23006 @ stock |
Could Intel Have Messed Up TIM Once Again?
"So an interesting story just popped up regarding Intel’s upcoming Core i7-7700K processor. A member of the Anandtech Forums has managed to delid the processor and posted some great findings after reapplication of new thermal interface."
Intel Core i7-7700K High Temperatures Could Be Caused By Poor TIM – Temps Improve After Delidding
"The forum member who goes by the name of “RichUK” managed to acquire a retail sample of the Intel Core i7 7700K processor. Several overclock runs were posted and the user went as far to delid the chip and apply new TIM (Thermal Interface Material). The results are shocking as it may proof that Intel has once again used poor quality TIM on their processors.
The issue with high temps on Intel processors arose back in the Ivy Bridge generation where the chips were heating up beyond a certain limit. The heat build up would affect overclocks and would result in poor stability. The issue was fixed when Intel started using higher quality packaging materials and improved TIM in the new Devil’s Canyon (Haswell Refresh) lineup. The last three generations of Intel processors haven’t seen issues related to heating but the issue might be returning.http://cdn.wccftech.com/wp-content/...-Lake-vs-Core-i7-6700K-Skylake_Processors.jpg
Several tech sites have already published reviews of the Core i7-7700K prior to the chip’s launch. All sites report higher temperatures for the Kaby Lake part compared to Skylake chips. One reason for that is due to the fact that Kaby Lake ships with higher clock speeds and boards (Z170) are not optimized with voltage ratings of the new processors as seen in Expreview’s review. But the other reason could very well be the application of poor TIM between the CPU die and the IHS (Internal Heat Spreader). More performance leaks can be seen here, here and here."
Intel Core i7-7700K Delidded and Tested (Before and After Results)
"RichUK started off the testing by acquiring his brand new Core i7-7700K processor. This is a retail chip and not an engineering sample. If the issue was on an ES chip, we could have blamed the early sample for being the reason but all tech sites that have covered the reviews got the retail chip for testing. The system used for test is listed below:
"On the first day, the user tested the chip in Cinebench R15 at stock settings. The temps during the test were stable around 60C. This testing was achieved with a Thermalright Ultra 120 tower cooler."
Intel Core i7-7700K OC With Corsair H110i:
"The moment the chip was overclocked to 5 GHz (1.34V) and tested through IBT and OCCT, the temps spiked. During Prime 95 test, the maximum reported temperature was 96C. The chip was stable for 15 minutes in Prime 95 v27.9. The chip passed through 6 hours of stability in Prime95 Small FFTs at 4.7 GHz (1.264V) with temps averaging around 83C. Cooling used was a Corsair H110i set to quite mode.
The chip was tested through several benchmarks including Cinebench R15 at the stable clock speeds of 4.7 GHz."
Intel Core i7-7700K OC With Kraken X62 and Delid:
"After the CPU was successfully delidded and applied with CoolLaboratory Liquid Ultra thermal paste and put under a Kraken X62 cooler, the chip was once again tested at 5 GHz (1.344V). With the fan operating at 50% and pump operational at 65% (silent mode), the chip reported a decrease of up to 30 degrees Celsius. On average, the chip was around 26C cooler than before delid.
The user reports that previously, the chip would shoot up to 99C but now it was averaging around 66C in Prime 95 v28.7. Furthermore, it was stable while before, it wasn’t as much.
The results show that new TIM application and delid improves the temps by a great margin. Delidding generally improves the temps but we don’t see such decreases so it is possible that the higher temps on Kaby Lake CPUs could be related to the low quality TIM used. We won’t say that it’s entirely to be blamed on TIM as the chips also ship with higher clock speeds over Skylake but this is a really interesting find by RichUK."
http://wccftech.com/intel-core-i7-7700k-delid-performance-tests/
"So an interesting story just popped up regarding Intel’s upcoming Core i7-7700K processor. A member of the Anandtech Forums has managed to delid the processor and posted some great findings after reapplication of new thermal interface."
Intel Core i7-7700K High Temperatures Could Be Caused By Poor TIM – Temps Improve After Delidding
"The forum member who goes by the name of “RichUK” managed to acquire a retail sample of the Intel Core i7 7700K processor. Several overclock runs were posted and the user went as far to delid the chip and apply new TIM (Thermal Interface Material). The results are shocking as it may proof that Intel has once again used poor quality TIM on their processors.
The issue with high temps on Intel processors arose back in the Ivy Bridge generation where the chips were heating up beyond a certain limit. The heat build up would affect overclocks and would result in poor stability. The issue was fixed when Intel started using higher quality packaging materials and improved TIM in the new Devil’s Canyon (Haswell Refresh) lineup. The last three generations of Intel processors haven’t seen issues related to heating but the issue might be returning.http://cdn.wccftech.com/wp-content/...-Lake-vs-Core-i7-6700K-Skylake_Processors.jpg
Several tech sites have already published reviews of the Core i7-7700K prior to the chip’s launch. All sites report higher temperatures for the Kaby Lake part compared to Skylake chips. One reason for that is due to the fact that Kaby Lake ships with higher clock speeds and boards (Z170) are not optimized with voltage ratings of the new processors as seen in Expreview’s review. But the other reason could very well be the application of poor TIM between the CPU die and the IHS (Internal Heat Spreader). More performance leaks can be seen here, here and here."
Intel Core i7-7700K Delidded and Tested (Before and After Results)
"RichUK started off the testing by acquiring his brand new Core i7-7700K processor. This is a retail chip and not an engineering sample. If the issue was on an ES chip, we could have blamed the early sample for being the reason but all tech sites that have covered the reviews got the retail chip for testing. The system used for test is listed below:
- Processor – Core i7-7700k
- Mobo – Asrock Z170 Pro4S – BIOS v7
- RAM – Corsair 2x8GB 3000Mhz C15
- GFX – EVGA GTX 1060 6GB SC
- Cooling Stock – an old Thermalright 6 heat pipe tower, Corsair SP120
- Cooling for OC – Corsair H110i with 2 x Corsair ML140 Pro LED"
"On the first day, the user tested the chip in Cinebench R15 at stock settings. The temps during the test were stable around 60C. This testing was achieved with a Thermalright Ultra 120 tower cooler."
Intel Core i7-7700K OC With Corsair H110i:
"The moment the chip was overclocked to 5 GHz (1.34V) and tested through IBT and OCCT, the temps spiked. During Prime 95 test, the maximum reported temperature was 96C. The chip was stable for 15 minutes in Prime 95 v27.9. The chip passed through 6 hours of stability in Prime95 Small FFTs at 4.7 GHz (1.264V) with temps averaging around 83C. Cooling used was a Corsair H110i set to quite mode.
The chip was tested through several benchmarks including Cinebench R15 at the stable clock speeds of 4.7 GHz."
Intel Core i7-7700K OC With Kraken X62 and Delid:
"After the CPU was successfully delidded and applied with CoolLaboratory Liquid Ultra thermal paste and put under a Kraken X62 cooler, the chip was once again tested at 5 GHz (1.344V). With the fan operating at 50% and pump operational at 65% (silent mode), the chip reported a decrease of up to 30 degrees Celsius. On average, the chip was around 26C cooler than before delid.
The user reports that previously, the chip would shoot up to 99C but now it was averaging around 66C in Prime 95 v28.7. Furthermore, it was stable while before, it wasn’t as much.
The results show that new TIM application and delid improves the temps by a great margin. Delidding generally improves the temps but we don’t see such decreases so it is possible that the higher temps on Kaby Lake CPUs could be related to the low quality TIM used. We won’t say that it’s entirely to be blamed on TIM as the chips also ship with higher clock speeds over Skylake but this is a really interesting find by RichUK."
http://wccftech.com/intel-core-i7-7700k-delid-performance-tests/