• Welcome to TechPowerUp Forums, Guest! Please check out our forum guidelines for info related to our community.

Core i7-3820 Sandy Bridge-E Starts Selling in Japan

Do you find the i7-3820 a better option than the costlier i7-2700K?

  • Yes

    Votes: 22 64.7%
  • No

    Votes: 12 35.3%

  • Total voters
    34

btarunr

Editor & Senior Moderator
Staff member
Joined
Oct 9, 2007
Messages
47,676 (7.43/day)
Location
Dublin, Ireland
System Name RBMK-1000
Processor AMD Ryzen 7 5700G
Motherboard Gigabyte B550 AORUS Elite V2
Cooling DeepCool Gammax L240 V2
Memory 2x 16GB DDR4-3200
Video Card(s) Galax RTX 4070 Ti EX
Storage Samsung 990 1TB
Display(s) BenQ 1440p 60 Hz 27-inch
Case Corsair Carbide 100R
Audio Device(s) ASUS SupremeFX S1220A
Power Supply Cooler Master MWE Gold 650W
Mouse ASUS ROG Strix Impact
Keyboard Gamdias Hermes E2
Software Windows 11 Pro
Intel's most affordable processor in the LGA2011 package, the Core i7-3820, surfaced on Japanese stores in the Akihabara electronics shopping district of Tokyo. It is priced around 25,000 JPY (US $322). The retail box of this chip, carrying the S-Spec code "SR0LD", appears to be as big as those of the Core i7-3930K and Core i7-3960X Extreme Edition, its shape indicates that it lacks a bundled cooling solution, and so users should still rely on compatible third-party coolers, or use Intel's RTS2011LC, purchased separately.

The Core i7-3820 is a quad-core part carved out of the Sandy Bridge-E silicon. It has four cores, and eight logical CPUs enabled with HyperThreading Technology. The chip is clocked at 3.60 GHz. Caches include 256 KB L2 per core, and 10 MB shared L3. The chip retains the quad-channel DDR3 IMC present on the more expensive six-core parts. It is also said to be "limited unlocked", meaning it allows multiplier-assisted overclocking to a certain limit. The Core i7-3820 is not officially launched, though it should be unofficially supported by most socket LGA2011 motherboards based on the X79 chipset.



View at TechPowerUp Main Site
 
Not officially launched? What the hell was Feb 13th supposed to be? Come on damn it, I woke up early just to order one. Yes, some people have actualy been waiting on this.. :rolleyes:
 
Hopefully the Egg and others will have it listed today. Amazon's has a nasty $341 price (avail 1-2 months). Come on $294...
 
$294 would make it a better deal than even the 2600K. Buy a $200 Intel DX79TO motherboard, four lesser capacity DDR3 modules instead of two higher capacity ones, and you're set.
 
Hopefully the Egg and others will have it listed today. Amazon's has a nasty $341 price (avail 1-2 months). Come on $294...

Provantage lists it for $314, but they don't show any in stock yet (ships in 3-4 weeks).
 
Retail price range will be $305-315, not $294 (distributors' price).
 
What stepping is this SR0LD supposed to be?

C1 or C2,....?

Either way, this is nice to see. Unfortunately, given the poor availability of the previously released Sandy Bridge-E Core i7 3930K now (and for quite some time) I have little confidence that Intel will provide sufficient quantities of the Core i7 3820 to meet demand,…..

Maybe availability of the Core i7 3820 will alleviate some of the demand for the Core i7 3930K and we would then start to see both come into stock,...
 
w.r.t. the poll I voted yes because of memory bandwidth and upgrade (Ivy Bridge-E) potential.
 
w.r.t. the poll I voted yes because of memory bandwidth and upgrade (Ivy Bridge-E) potential.

Are we 100% certain beyond any shadow of a doubt that the current LGA2011 Sandy Bridge-E platform will support Ivy Bridge-E,……?

I haven’t seen anything to that effect yet. Not saying Intel hasn’t made an official statement stating support, just that I haven’t heard of it if they did.
 
Can anybody answer my question above? Thanks.:)
 

OEM CPUs have a different warranty policy, which isn't as user-friendly as the retail box. Other than that, they're the same, except some items that are part of the packaging. Sometimes case-badge (maximus e-peen enlargement) isn't part of the package, etc.
 
Are we 100% certain beyond any shadow of a doubt that the current LGA2011 Sandy Bridge-E platform will support Ivy Bridge-E,……?

I haven’t seen anything to that effect yet. Not saying Intel hasn’t made an official statement stating support, just that I haven’t heard of it if they did.

Admittedly the answer there is no. We've plenty of hearsay and conjecture. Those are kinds of evidence, right? (i miss Lionel Hutz).
 
I voted yes due to sli and memory advantage (not that either will matter in 99% of situations but still the platform seems built to last longer)

but we'll see how it compares in benches to the 2600k, based on the other SB-E benches, the 2600k will likely seem faster.
 
Well in that case its difficult to say what the better option is. It should be pointed out though that the Ivy Bridge Core i7 3770(k) will presumably be in the same price range as the Sandy Bridge Core i7 2600(k) and Core i7 2700(k) within an April timeframe.

Its prudent to take into account the known upgradeable nature of the LGA1155 platform from Sandy Bridge to Ivy bride with respect to the uncertain upgradeable status of the Sandy Bridge-E LGA2011 platform.

Also note that with the Advent of the new Z77 express chipset and new features such as Intel Thunderbolt (on some new Z77 motherboards) in an April timeframe, the older X79 chipsets (motherboards) could start to look a little stale. It makes sense for Intel to refresh the X79 chipset (with expected features not released initially) and or for motherboard manufactures to update their board designs to keep pace with high-end Z77 boards.

All I am saying is that the more expensive / higher-end LGA2011 platform shouldn’t be wanting for features inherent on the lower-end LGA1155 platform (aside from Quick-sync) and that is probably what will happen without an update.
 
Yea the future of LGA 2011 seems uncertain. They should have launched 3820 sooner..
 
Oh yes,…..

I agree with you there. When Bloomfield launched in circa 2008 it was a trifecta with roughly the same price range as Sandy Bridge-E today. The Core i7 3820 is roughly equivalent to the very successful Core i7 920. No one would have liked to have seen the 920 delayed like this from the initial launch.

Still having said that, nothing could really touch the Bloomfield line for the same price back then, whereas, now the Sandy Bridge line is breathing down the neck of Sandy Bridge-E.
 
I'm a bit confused whats supposed to be the new top dog platform from 1366? Ivy Bridge, Ivy Bridge-E or Sandy Bridge-E?
 
I'm a bit confused whats supposed to be the new top dog platform from 1366? Ivy Bridge, Ivy Bridge-E or Sandy Bridge-E?

Top dog Intel platform is s2011. Sandy Bridge-E is the processor there now, but Intel will shrink the die from 32nm to 22nm with Ivy Bridge-E, just like they shrunk the Nehalem die from 45nm to 32nm on s1366 with Gulftown.
 
Hasn't anyone seen benches? 3820 destroys 2600k from what I've seen. Plus 8 sticks of ram and 16x/16x CFX/SLI, who would vote for 2700k?
 
Common Microcenter, bring me a 299.99$ i7 3820 with a 40~60$ rebate on a cooler or motherboard
 
I ordered mine 25 minutes ago.

I have an Asus P9X79 (vanilla version) with 32GB Kingston HyperX T1 Black waiting for it. Then they are all going to (actively) wait for a couple of NVIDIA's new 28nm cards.
 
Back
Top