F5F Stay Refreshed Hardware Desktop Returning to Intel options for motherboards

Returning to Intel options for motherboards

Returning to Intel options for motherboards

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gamb1no
Member
226
03-09-2016, 03:31 AM
#11
On your i7 11700F without power limits in BIOS, it consumes 198 watts during Cinebench testing.
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gamb1no
03-09-2016, 03:31 AM #11

On your i7 11700F without power limits in BIOS, it consumes 198 watts during Cinebench testing.

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NaomiGames_MC
Junior Member
13
03-09-2016, 05:27 AM
#12
When examining the stack, there are 228w PL2 across the entire range from i5(k) to i9(k). It seems premature to conclude based on leaks alone.
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NaomiGames_MC
03-09-2016, 05:27 AM #12

When examining the stack, there are 228w PL2 across the entire range from i5(k) to i9(k). It seems premature to conclude based on leaks alone.

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ethan2901
Junior Member
41
03-09-2016, 05:44 AM
#13
We're attempting to mislead Intel, as they're expected to consume a lot of power.
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ethan2901
03-09-2016, 05:44 AM #13

We're attempting to mislead Intel, as they're expected to consume a lot of power.

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Anselhero
Senior Member
582
03-10-2016, 10:19 PM
#14
Certainly, though there will be some variation. I believe 228w PL2 isn't suitable across the board. Probably just a temporary placeholder.
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Anselhero
03-10-2016, 10:19 PM #14

Certainly, though there will be some variation. I believe 228w PL2 isn't suitable across the board. Probably just a temporary placeholder.

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xEchoz
Member
208
03-11-2016, 05:23 AM
#15
We'll observe the outcome. My i7 is marked as a 65-watt unit. I understand the reasoning behind bypassing the limits—I fully grasp that overclocking a K SKU is always demanding in terms of power.
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xEchoz
03-11-2016, 05:23 AM #15

We'll observe the outcome. My i7 is marked as a 65-watt unit. I understand the reasoning behind bypassing the limits—I fully grasp that overclocking a K SKU is always demanding in terms of power.

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louie018
Posting Freak
824
03-29-2016, 04:05 PM
#16
It seems like your power draw is way higher than expected. Those numbers are definitely not efficient.
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louie018
03-29-2016, 04:05 PM #16

It seems like your power draw is way higher than expected. Those numbers are definitely not efficient.

F
Flashice
Member
172
03-29-2016, 04:41 PM
#17
A bit of a debate about power specs—150W versus 250W while GPUs come with 460W BIOS settings.
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Flashice
03-29-2016, 04:41 PM #17

A bit of a debate about power specs—150W versus 250W while GPUs come with 460W BIOS settings.

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LarsMatena
Senior Member
602
04-06-2016, 04:35 PM
#18
I'm still catching up on this too, but from what I know the 8600k was around 95w (wow), 9900k is near 140w, and I’m pretty sure 10900k is better than what I remember. The 11900k was pushing 300w+ in some sources, and there were leaks suggesting a pcore boost to 300w+ with 320w GPUs (Intel even admitted it). They’re saying 450w is coming soon, and the 5600x is now at 144w. I’ve seen 5950x at 180w for me once I started increasing it.
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LarsMatena
04-06-2016, 04:35 PM #18

I'm still catching up on this too, but from what I know the 8600k was around 95w (wow), 9900k is near 140w, and I’m pretty sure 10900k is better than what I remember. The 11900k was pushing 300w+ in some sources, and there were leaks suggesting a pcore boost to 300w+ with 320w GPUs (Intel even admitted it). They’re saying 450w is coming soon, and the 5600x is now at 144w. I’ve seen 5950x at 180w for me once I started increasing it.

D
dylosama
Member
150
04-07-2016, 02:35 PM
#19
It wasn't an all-core setup at 4700 MHz with Linpack Xtreme. I've noticed 240W from my 5900X, which usually works fine, but at 7nm it's different.
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dylosama
04-07-2016, 02:35 PM #19

It wasn't an all-core setup at 4700 MHz with Linpack Xtreme. I've noticed 240W from my 5900X, which usually works fine, but at 7nm it's different.

Q
Qandii
Member
233
04-08-2016, 03:46 AM
#20
That was just an exaggerated estimate. CPU power consumption below 300 watts is generally not realistic these days because GPUs consume a lot of energy.
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Qandii
04-08-2016, 03:46 AM #20

That was just an exaggerated estimate. CPU power consumption below 300 watts is generally not realistic these days because GPUs consume a lot of energy.

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