DrMrLordX
Lifer
- Apr 27, 2000
- 22,547
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1.4v for 4.4Ghz - that's just terrible.....
It is, though I'm looking at the link now, and I see nothing showing voltage or any other setting. Was that data removed?
1.4v for 4.4Ghz - that's just terrible.....
It is, though I'm looking at the link now, and I see nothing showing voltage or any other setting. Was that data removed?
Since there is no other Broadwell desktop SKU, those are not only replacements for the Haswell-R but for Haswell desktop in general.
I'm just going to wait out the Broadwell launch for 1-2 months until Skylake launches.
At those prices I don't think Intel is going to sell many of them unless people just absolutely don't want to buy a socket 1151 Z170 board and some new DDR4 memory.
Might as well merge this thread right into the Skylake thread.
No, Haswell "refresh" was the replacement for Haswell.
Obviously a nobrainer that broadwell on desktop isn't something we care about as much as Skylake. Skylake is almost here, I want to see Broadwell's improvement over Haswell when OC'd to get an idea of where Skylake will end up though.
None, as of now its a paper launch.
The PiFast a tad under 4% with that bench by my reckoning, so 4.8GHz BDW would be a little under 5.0GHz for HSW. Wprime seems to do better.Then the performance of a 4.2-4.4GHz Broadwell might be that of a 4.8-5GHz Haswell
These volts are nowhere near safe for 14nm.
Yea ok, its the replacement for Haswell Refresh then
1.437v for 4.5Ghz - I'm so glad I went with 4790k.
These volts are nowhere near safe for 14nm. Mine does 4.8 at 1.29.
No, Skylake is the replacement for haswell refresh. But you can call Broadwell C whatever you want I suppose and say how bad the cpu performance is if that makes you feel better.
2 things folks:
1. 1.4X volts is not safe for 22nm haswell, so how can it be safe for 14nm?
No, Skylake is the replacement for Broadwell.
Just because Intel messed up with broadwell doesnt mean its not a Haswell replacement. It is after all a direct replacement for the same socket. Everybody last year was made to believe by Intel that Broadwell was a direct replacement for Haswell. Everyone was recommending socket 1150 last year for the upgradability to Broadwell.
I Dont believe I have mentioned anything about the CPU performance did i ???
Do you have a link to where Intel stated desktop Broadwell was to replace Haswell? Granted that would be the normal cadence, but it has been long known that there would be no desktop broadwell.
You hear that Broadwell? You're just a puny midget, a low power mistake, and you'll never make it to the Big League! Doesn't matter you're so close to your elder brothers, low power can't jump! Get it Mr. Fancy Cache?! Oh for crying out loud, this kid is autistic, don't we have some older socket we can send it to?! I wish you were a SoC!
That L4 cache really saves the day for BW, it compensates for the loss in frequency well enough to be worth it for some people, but that really spells trouble for BW-E. BW-E won't have L4 cache to compensate for the lower clocks, so what will it have instead? 8 Cores for non-extreme editions? I can't think of anything else that would make BW-E appealing.
Higher speeds and lower power use. Possibly significantly lower power use. Otherwise yeah I agree with you.