F5F Stay Refreshed Software PC Gaming A significant improvement is achievable by moving from an i5-3470 processor to an i5-8600k for approximately $700.

A significant improvement is achievable by moving from an i5-3470 processor to an i5-8600k for approximately $700.

A significant improvement is achievable by moving from an i5-3470 processor to an i5-8600k for approximately $700.

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Vinceb11
Member
234
07-15-2017, 06:56 PM
#1
My present computer utilizes a 6-year-old Intel Core i5-3470 processor running at 3.2 GHz, accompanied by 8GB of DDR3 RAM with a speed of 1600MHz. I am considering an upgrade and have been researching the i5-8600K processor paired with an ASRock Z370 Extreme 4 motherboard and 16GB of DDR4 RAM at a speed of 2666MHz. This upgrade would likely cost approximately $740 in my region. Consequently, I am curious about the performance improvement this upgrade would deliver specifically for gaming—particularly regarding frame rates in contemporary titles. Additionally, I plan to update my graphics card at some point in the future, currently possessing a GTX 970. Thank you for your assistance.
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Vinceb11
07-15-2017, 06:56 PM #1

My present computer utilizes a 6-year-old Intel Core i5-3470 processor running at 3.2 GHz, accompanied by 8GB of DDR3 RAM with a speed of 1600MHz. I am considering an upgrade and have been researching the i5-8600K processor paired with an ASRock Z370 Extreme 4 motherboard and 16GB of DDR4 RAM at a speed of 2666MHz. This upgrade would likely cost approximately $740 in my region. Consequently, I am curious about the performance improvement this upgrade would deliver specifically for gaming—particularly regarding frame rates in contemporary titles. Additionally, I plan to update my graphics card at some point in the future, currently possessing a GTX 970. Thank you for your assistance.

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Dat_Asian_
Member
146
07-22-2017, 09:41 PM
#2
The information presented here has been revised utilizing alternative phrasing to enhance clarity and precision.

A refined version for the year 2070 or 2080 is now available.
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Dat_Asian_
07-22-2017, 09:41 PM #2

The information presented here has been revised utilizing alternative phrasing to enhance clarity and precision.

A refined version for the year 2070 or 2080 is now available.

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frsandstone77
Member
112
07-22-2017, 11:58 PM
#3
The ebony avian stated this: you won't observe a significant enhancement that justifies the expense until you also enhance your graphics card. A more powerful graphics card will deliver increased frames, and a more recent central processing unit to prevent it from becoming a limiting factor.
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frsandstone77
07-22-2017, 11:58 PM #3

The ebony avian stated this: you won't observe a significant enhancement that justifies the expense until you also enhance your graphics card. A more powerful graphics card will deliver increased frames, and a more recent central processing unit to prevent it from becoming a limiting factor.

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132
07-23-2017, 12:40 AM
#4
Yea I see, But I cant really also afford a new gpu at this moment, so would you say my gtx 970 is getting bottlenecked by the i5-3470 or not? If not, is there really a point of doing the upgrade before I can afford a new gpu?
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Yesyesag_Plays
07-23-2017, 12:40 AM #4

Yea I see, But I cant really also afford a new gpu at this moment, so would you say my gtx 970 is getting bottlenecked by the i5-3470 or not? If not, is there really a point of doing the upgrade before I can afford a new gpu?

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3dland
Junior Member
19
07-23-2017, 10:49 AM
#5
I understand, however, I’m currently unable to purchase a new graphics card, so could you tell me if my GTX 970 is being limited by the i5-3470 processor? If it’s not significantly hindering performance, is it truly beneficial to upgrade my graphics card before I can financially manage a replacement? There’s a minor restriction occasionally with the 3470, but generally it works well together.
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3dland
07-23-2017, 10:49 AM #5

I understand, however, I’m currently unable to purchase a new graphics card, so could you tell me if my GTX 970 is being limited by the i5-3470 processor? If it’s not significantly hindering performance, is it truly beneficial to upgrade my graphics card before I can financially manage a replacement? There’s a minor restriction occasionally with the 3470, but generally it works well together.

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LadyErinicorn
Member
150
07-24-2017, 08:58 AM
#6
A less expensive route to improvement could involve choosing Ryzen. This would likely provide sufficient financial flexibility for acquiring a 1070 or 1070 Ti.
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LadyErinicorn
07-24-2017, 08:58 AM #6

A less expensive route to improvement could involve choosing Ryzen. This would likely provide sufficient financial flexibility for acquiring a 1070 or 1070 Ti.

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Reuben135
Member
89
07-24-2017, 10:06 AM
#7
I understand that, but I’m currently unable to purchase a new graphics card, so could you tell me if my GTX 970 is being limited by the i5-3470 processor? If it’s not significantly constrained, is it truly necessary to upgrade before I can obtain a new GPU?

There’s a minor restriction occasionally with the 3470, yet it's generally a compatible combination.

Yes, I concur.
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Reuben135
07-24-2017, 10:06 AM #7

I understand that, but I’m currently unable to purchase a new graphics card, so could you tell me if my GTX 970 is being limited by the i5-3470 processor? If it’s not significantly constrained, is it truly necessary to upgrade before I can obtain a new GPU?

There’s a minor restriction occasionally with the 3470, yet it's generally a compatible combination.

Yes, I concur.