![]() ![]() What is surprising though is that Intel waited until now to unleash this chip. All things considered the i7-4970K holds a 17 percent average performance advantage over the i7-4770K.Ĭonsidering the i7-4970K’s ~15 percent base clockspeed advantage over the i7-4770K our results shouldn’t be all that surprising. In our gaming benchmarks this story gets much less interesting and the i7-4770K more or less ties our Devil’s Canyon wonder chip. Moving to compute the i7-4790K wins big in Luxmark with a 35 percent advantage. Looking at multicore performance we can see a very solid advantage of about fifteen percent across all of our benchmarks. The 4.4 Ghz turbo is no doubt at work here. Starting with single threaded performance the i7-4790K clearly takes the lead over its older cousin. We’ve also refocused our gaming benchmarks to look more at titles that are actually playable on this hardware. Additionally our custom JPEG decoding benchmark ate itself during testing so it’s missing as well. ![]() Our Vertcoin-based GPU mining performance benchmark would not run on either of Intel’s chips so it’s missing from our results. We’ll be using a pretty wide array of benchmarks in our testing with a focus on four major categories of performance: Single-threaded, Multi-threaded, Compute, and Gaming. ![]() Here’s our test bed setup and as always you can find our raw benchmarking data and exact settings on Mega. The user experience, installation, and hardware support requirements are all identical. As far as subjective impressions go there is little to no difference between these two Intel chips. ![]() We’ll be testing this chip on Biostar’s Hi-FI Z97WE motherboard which we looked at a couple weeks ago. It has a TDP of 84 Watts and the Intel HD 4600 GPU that we’ve spent quite a bit of time testing here at SemiAccurate. The i7-4790K also turbos up to 4.4 Ghz, a speed at which it spent most of its time running at while we had it. Almost a decade later Intel has finally eclipsed the clock speeds that it set with its Pentium 4 Extreme Edition processors. For those of you who may not remember the i7-4790K is the first consumer chip from Intel to ever have a 4.0 Ghz based clock. In this article we’re going to be comparing the stock performance of the i7-4790K to that of the previous socket 1156 champion the i7-4770K. We covered the changes that set the i7-4790K apart from other Haswell chips last week. Today we’ll be looking at Intel’s new Core i7-4790K codenamed Devil’s Canyon. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |