Intel Core i7 875 K Performance and Overclocking

Published by Marc Büchel on 12.08.10
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Die Lynnfield CPU


With Lynnfield Intel presents Bloomfields smaller brother which should show it's muscles especially in the mainstream market. In direct comparison to Bloomfield, Lynnfield is equipped with a dual-channel instead of a triple-channel memory interface. The i5 models have no hyperthreading but every single Lynnfield CPU comes with an enhanced Turbo-Mode. Intels arguments for a Turbo-Mode which is able to dynamically overclock the CPU by up to 666 MHz or in other words five multiplyer stpes is, that most of the software on the market is still not optimized for multithreaded CPUs and therefore the user mainly profits from higher clock speeds than massive parallelism.





Already with the Bloomfield Intel has been very proud of the scalability of Nehalems architecture, respectively the relative easyness to adapt the architecture to different markets. As a consequence it isn't a surprise that there weren't many changes on the "Die" itself. The only conspicuity is the fact that the Lynnfield CPUs carry about 40 million more transistors than their Bloomfield equivalents.



Page 1 - Introduction Page 9 - Super Pi / Wprime
Page 2 - Specifications Page 10 - Compression
Page 3 - The Lynnfield CPU Page 11 - Crysis
Page 4 - Test Setup Page 12 - PT Boats Knights of Seas
Page 5 - Futuremark Page 13 - Resident Evil 5
Page 6 - Cinebench Page 14 - Street Fighter 4
Page 7 - SiSoft Sandra 1 Page 15 - Power consumption and Overclocking
Page 8 - SiSoft Sandra 2 Page 16 - Conclusion



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