![]() Intel should spend more time on developing rather than bringing out new products every couple months. I don't know much about the 4970k, but I think it'll be at best an upgrade like from a 3770k to a 4770k. And never leave turbo boost on if you want to OC. First of all that voltage is really low for an OC like that, and second, use an actual software that reads your temps and voltage. For me it's just a way to make sure the CPU runs at it's best settings (in my case I lowered the stock voltage and still got up to 4.5Ghz) 4.91.325v is really good for a 4790k 3 level 1 Thatwasmint But what I want is for it to be at the stock turbo boost of 4.4ghz all of the time. It's not like you can add the 20% you overclocked to your overall performance. You can get it to turbo boost, this is what is called overclocking, read the Haswell guide in the side bar and make sure you have enough cooling. Many can build their own sub $1k DAW boxes based on chips like this which are top performers and if they have added needs just have multiple boxes (if you run a business you should have redundancy).From my experience there is no big gain in overclocking. ![]() The purpose of keeping an eye on the 4790K which is due out in a couple weeks is to see if it fills the role of best 4 core modest price / high performance chip. ![]() There are still big performance gains to be had via overclocking but that is a discussion worthy of it's own thread if you want to start one up. Skylake is the 14nm die size "tock" after Broadwell and thus you won't be seeing it until 2016 at the earliest. ![]()
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