- Mar 18, 2007
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Are you mad that the 9700k is around the corner with being released or are you happy with your purchase ?
It's actually looking like an 8-core Coffee Lake was purely speculation, if you follow the most recent news / roadmaps.
I want your job, especially if that is after taxes!!!!Not when the cost is covered in a day's pay.
Are you mad that the 9700k is around the corner with being released or are you happy with your purchase ?
Yeah looking at the benchmarks, the i5-8400 and 8700 seems to be the best CPUs to get if one isn't overclocking. I would be looking at the 8700 if I was building a new system anytime soon.I'm building my 8700 non-K system tomorrow now that I have all the parts. I bought it long after the rumors of 8c/16t parts came out. I make enough that I have no budget constraints: I could have gone with a Threadripper or i9-79870XE.
4c/8t 7700K is fast enough for any current graphics card and game. The 8700 gives me +50% "future proofing" with a 65 watt TDP instead of 91. That's enough to make me happy.
You can wait forever for the next new thing, or you can make the best available choice at the time you're ready to upgrade. For me the time is now and the CPU is the 8700 non-K.
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point is, no reason to be angry when you buy the latest hardware and X months later a new chip comes out. that's how progress works. be happy you have a good CPU for many years to come.
I have the opposite problem: I was waiting for the 8700k to come out August 1. Now I'm going to wait until the prices fall after Christmas. I'm hoping I can OC mine enough to test heatsinks.i was slightly POed when the 8700K released not 9 months after the 7700K which i had bought at launch, but it really wasn't warranted. benchmarks show the 7700K is one of the best gaming chips today, so i got over it.
point is, no reason to be angry when you buy the latest hardware and X months later a new chip comes out. that's how progress works. be happy you have a good CPU for many years to come.
What is the price gap between the 8600K and the 8700K?
It might be different elsewhere, but in Australia, it seems like there is a terrible value for money choice to be made, just for hyperthreading.
With these chips being so scarce in recent times, plenty of people were happy to just grab the first 6 core they could get their hands on, but now as the dust settles and availability improves, I wonder how many people will prefer the 8700K to the 8600K?
In the past, I think the dollar difference in Australia between a 2500K and 2600K model was about AUD$130/$US97.84 or less and it stayed at that amount through subsequent family releases.About $170 AUD difference, about $AU560 for a 8700K vs $AU390 for a 8600K.
Probably worth it if you actually need the threads, which can give a ~25% uplift in MT software. For gaming, it's probably not worth it, at least not in the short term. 6 threads is plenty for gaming today, but in 2020? I doubt it.
I think in the long run the 8700K will end up being the better buy than the 8600K, even for gaming, the same way the 2600K has aged a lot better than a 2500K has and still runs todays AAA games well, whereas the 2500K is thread limited and struggles to maintain 60fps mins in many games.
Around the corner? Latest Intel roadmap leak doesn't even include 9000 series, suggesting it may be a late 2018 at best. It's definitely not around the corner.Are you mad that the 9700k is around the corner with being released
In the past, I think the dollar difference in Australia between a 2500K and 2600K model was about AUD$130/$US97.84 or less and it stayed at that amount through subsequent family releases.
But now in Australia, getting hyperthreading on the top i7 model, is AUD$199/$US150 more expensive.
I can get the i5 8600K for AUD$370 and the i7 8700K for AUD$569
That is a hell of a premium for hyperthreading, especially if you express it as a percentage of the i5 8600K's purchase price.
If the 9700K is coming, I don't think it's an 8 core chip.
I think it is an improved 8700K.