- Joined
- Oct 5, 2017
- Messages
- 595 (0.23/day)
Soldered IHS -> better heat conduction thus lowered temps and lowered power(yes running cooler generates less heat). Possible more fine tuned manufacturing process and thus possibility of lower core voltages -> lowered power. What I'm trying to say there are more variables than just tdp and core count.
The solder, a larger die area, a better IHS, etc, will all have an effect, but not the one you're describing.
If you have a 130W CPU under a heatsink that can only dissipate 95W maximum, it doesn't matter whether it's soldered, it doesn't matter how big the die is, it doesn't matter if the IHS is made of a super-conducting alloy with a thermal conductivity of 5000W/m Kelvin. The raw amount of energy is higher than the heatsink can dissipate into the surrounding air, and that heatsink will not be able to keep that CPU cool.
The particular rule I am describing is cast iron. More heat *must* equal more capacity to dissipate that heat, which means larger radiators, larger fin stacks, and faster fans. sure, you could introduce a bottleneck before that point, by using toothpaste TIM, or a wooden heatspreader, but ultimately, getting rid of any bottleneck doesn't allow more dissipation. It allows the full utilisation of the amount of dissipation you had all along. If the heatsink is too small, or the amount of heat is too large, you can't fix that with solder or a better IHS or a larger die area.
The 6700K had a 4GHz base clock. The 7700K was notable for the fact even in stock trim, it's temps would routinely spike to TJMax, and it's base clock was 4.2GHz. With the next gen, we lost 500MHz from base clocks, as the 8700K has a 3.7GHz base clock despite being made on a process 2 generations more optimised than the 6700K. The 9900K is cited to have either a 3.6GHz or 3.1GHz base clock.
They're quite clearly reducing the base clocks and basing the TDP off of those figures, in order to avoid admitting that at full boost, these chips are getting hotter and hotter as they add more cores and push the boost higher.
Actually it kinda does. Keeping your chip cooler means there's less voltage leakage, which means you can reduce your voltage while maintaining stability, which means you use less power, which means the chip produces less heat to begin with.Running cooler does not generate less heat, not on a CPU.
This all relies on manual tweaking and undervolting though. If your chip is running at stock settings then it will simply run on a volt/frequency curve in the BIOS, and temperature won't be accounted for at all.
Last edited: