| Processor | 4 GHz core_i7 |
|---|---|
| Memory Speed | 2133 MHz |
| Graphics Coprocessor | integrated_graphics |
| Card Description | integrated |
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Intel BX80662I76700K 4512 Core i7 6700K 4.00 GHz Unlocked Quad Core Sky Lake Desktop Processor, Socket LGA 1151
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| Brand | Intel |
| CPU Manufacturer | Intel |
| CPU Model | Core i7 |
| CPU Speed | 4 GHz |
| CPU Socket | LGA 1151 |
About this item
- It is lga 1151. 6th Generation Intel Core i7 Processors
- Unlocked processor. Ddr4 & ddr3l support
- Display resolution up to 4096x2304
- Intel turbo boost technology
- Compatible with Intel 100 series chipset motherboards, It does not include a fan
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This item Intel BX80662I76700K 4512 Core i7 6700K 4.00 GHz Unlocked Quad Core Sky Lake Desktop Processor, Socket LGA 1151 | Intel Core i7-7700K Desktop Processor 4 Cores up to 4.5 GHz Unlocked LGA 1151 100/200 Series 91W | Intel Core i7-7700 Desktop Processor 4 Cores up to 4.2 GHz LGA 1151 100/200 Series 65W (Renewed) | Intel Core i7-6700K | Intel Core i7-7700 Desktop Processor 4 Cores up to 4.2 GHz LGA 1151 100/200 Series 65W | Intel Core i7-8700K Desktop Processor 6 Cores up to 4.7GHz Turbo Unlocked LGA1151 300 Series 95W | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Customer Rating | 4.7 out of 5 stars (2583) | 4.7 out of 5 stars (2955) | 4.6 out of 5 stars (75) | 4.7 out of 5 stars (1352) | 4.7 out of 5 stars (1031) | 4.8 out of 5 stars (6186) |
| Price | $220.00$220.00 | $289.18$289.18 | $129.99$129.99 | $220.00$220.00 | $205.00$205.00 | $212.00$212.00 |
| Sold By | Maestro Technology LLC | PROSALE (SN Recorded) | Computer Headquarters Certified Refurbished | Maestro Technology LLC | Maestro Technology LLC | Maestro Technology LLC |
| CPU Model | Core i7 | Core i7 | Core i7 | Core i7 | Core i7 | Core i7 |
| CPU Manufacturer | Intel | Intel | Intel | Intel | Intel | Intel |
| CPU Socket | LGA 1151 | LGA 1151 | LGA 1151 | LGA 1151 | LGA 1151 | LGA 1151 |
| CPU Speed | 4 GHz | 4.2 GHz | 4.2 GHz | 4 GHz | 4.2 GHz | 3.7 GHz |
| Device Type | Processors | Processors | — | — | Processors | Processors |
| Item Dimensions LxWxH | 5.5 x 4.8 x 1.8 inches | 9.52 x 5 x 4.88 inches | 0 x 0 x 0 inches | 1.55 x 0.93 x 1.55 inches | 14.48 x 5.07 x 4.92 inches | 4 x 2 x 4.6 inches |
| Item Weight | 0.16 ounces | 3.04 ounces | 1.06 ounces | 0.01 ounces | 0.75 lbs | 3.00 ounces |
| Year | 2015 | 2017 | — | 2015 | 2016 | 17 |
| Processor Count | 4 | 4 | 4 | 4 | 4 | 6 |
| Wattage | 91 watts | 91 | 65.0 watts | 91 watts | 65 | 95 |
Product Description
Intel i7-6700k quad-core (4 core) 4 ghz processor - socket h4 lga-1151. Display resolution up to 4096x2304. Max Turbo Frequency: 4.20 GHz. Memory Types: DDR4-1866/2133, DDR3L-1333/1600 at 1.35V. Graphics Base Frequency: 350 MHz, Graphics Max Dynamic Frequency: 1.15 GHz
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10th Gen Intel Core Boxed Processor Family
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Technical Details
| Brand | Intel |
|---|---|
| Series | Intel Boxed Core I7-6700K 4.00 GHz 8M BX80662I76700K |
| Item model number | BX80662I76700K |
| Item Weight | 0.16 ounces |
| Product Dimensions | 5.5 x 4.8 x 1.8 inches |
| Item Dimensions LxWxH | 5.5 x 4.8 x 1.8 inches |
| Processor Brand | Intel |
| Number of Processors | 4 |
| Computer Memory Type | DDR4 SDRAM |
| Manufacturer | Intel |
| ASIN | B012M8LXQW |
| Is Discontinued By Manufacturer | No |
| Date First Available | August 5, 2015 |
Additional Information
| Customer Reviews |
4.7 out of 5 stars |
|---|---|
| Best Sellers Rank | #170 in Computer CPU Processors |
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It is a 14nm process, which is one of the newer processes, and it runs at 4Ghz, The CPU is unlocked, so you can overclock if you want. I put on a water cooler and just did some brief checks with OC, and I ran at 4.5Ghz without issue. However, I really don't need it and I don't want to risk burning it out fast, so I put it back to 4Ghz for now. But, I know I can run much faster in the future if I want to.
As for specs and performance, this is a middle of the road 4 core, 8 thread CPU. It has the memory controller built in, supporting DDR4 memory, which is what I use, and the performance is just staggering. >34GB/s of memory throughput, that's wild.
The CPU has 8MB of smartcache that is shared amongst the cores. This is much better than normal cache, it allows a program in cache to be shared with another core, when the thread jumps to a new core, without copying the data to another location in cache. The performance increase of this small feature is quite large. The CPU has a decent video card built in, but I don't use it. I opted for the Nvidia GTX1080. Combining this CPU with that graphics card, M.2 drive, and DDR4 memory makes this a powerhouse that can stand its own against basically anything. However, the built in graphics do support 4K resolutions, so if you are not playing cutting edge games, or VR, the graphics card built in is probably all you would ever need.
Without going into the technical specifics of this CPU, it basically has all the features that you would expect from any i7 CPU. The price, for what you get, is really unbeatable. You can get an i7 with more cores, or cache, but you will pay a large amount more. For 99.99% of people out there this is more than you will need. There is nothing you will get from the CPUs that are 2X+ the price that you will even notice. Just make sure you pair this with a good chipset, like the Z170, and never look back, you will run so fast you won't believe it.
My PC runs windows 10. From the time the BIOS screen disappears to when it needs my password is about 3.5 seconds. From hitting enter after my password until the machine is fully booted, and I have full control, no hourglass, etc, is about 2-2.5 seconds. So, I boot in under 6 seconds, basically. That is a full cold boot, not a resume from sleep.
Pros: 4Ghz, unlocked and ready for overclocking (use a water cooler if you overclock this bad-boy). 4K graphics built in. 16 lanes of PCIe on board for fast access to the video card. 20 more lanes of PCIe on the chipset, so you can have another 16x video card, and a M.2 x4 drive, or whatever else you might want. New generation cache speeds up thread jumping from core to core. DDR4 memory controller with >34GB/s throughput. The biggest PRO is the price, for what you get.
Cons: Would have been nice to have 12MB or more of cache, but the cost would have been significantly more. For the price, there is really no downside to this CPU.
The only con I have of this chip is that it doesn't cook me breakfast! *gigglesnort* Seriously though, if you have the means and the desire, get this CPU and you will not regret it.
At the end of the day, to each their own. I upgraded to 'Skylake' out of sheer desire, not out of necessity. You WILL love this chip if you are coming off of anything older than my previous chip (Ivy) such as a Sandy, Pentium, or AMD equivalent processor. I'm delightfully satisfied with this CPU in terms of performance improvements, the hyperthreading (coming from an i5) for multiple app tasks, its overclocking potential, and its temperatures. I recommend it to you without a doubt, as long as your budget can handle the additional required hardware you may need mentioned in paragraph one.
My 'Skylake' build specs and some pictures:
*CPU - Intel i7-6700K (4.5 for now; not in a hurry to increase it)
*CPU Cooler - Corsair H110i GTX AiO Liquid cooler (My H100i broke, I upgraded to the H110i)
*Motherboard - ASUS Maximus Hero VIII
*RAM - Corsair Vengeance LPX DDR4 16GB (3000 Mhz)
*GPU - ASUS STRIX 980TI 6 GB (OC edition)
*Chassis - Corsair 760T Graphite Series (White Edition)
*Storage - SAMSUNG 850 Pro 256 GB SSD (Boot drive), SAMSUNG 850 EVO 1 TB SSD, Intel 750 Series NVME SSD 400 GB
*PSU - Corsair HX1000i (80+ Platinum Certified) (A bit overkill for non-SLI, but I got a good price for it.)
*Fans - Corsair AF120's (x2) and AF140's (x4), White Edition LED
*OS - Windows 10 Home, 64 Bit
Reviewed in the United States on October 23, 2015
The only con I have of this chip is that it doesn't cook me breakfast! *gigglesnort* Seriously though, if you have the means and the desire, get this CPU and you will not regret it.
At the end of the day, to each their own. I upgraded to 'Skylake' out of sheer desire, not out of necessity. You WILL love this chip if you are coming off of anything older than my previous chip (Ivy) such as a Sandy, Pentium, or AMD equivalent processor. I'm delightfully satisfied with this CPU in terms of performance improvements, the hyperthreading (coming from an i5) for multiple app tasks, its overclocking potential, and its temperatures. I recommend it to you without a doubt, as long as your budget can handle the additional required hardware you may need mentioned in paragraph one.
My 'Skylake' build specs and some pictures:
*CPU - Intel i7-6700K (4.5 for now; not in a hurry to increase it)
*CPU Cooler - Corsair H110i GTX AiO Liquid cooler (My H100i broke, I upgraded to the H110i)
*Motherboard - ASUS Maximus Hero VIII
*RAM - Corsair Vengeance LPX DDR4 16GB (3000 Mhz)
*GPU - ASUS STRIX 980TI 6 GB (OC edition)
*Chassis - Corsair 760T Graphite Series (White Edition)
*Storage - SAMSUNG 850 Pro 256 GB SSD (Boot drive), SAMSUNG 850 EVO 1 TB SSD, Intel 750 Series NVME SSD 400 GB
*PSU - Corsair HX1000i (80+ Platinum Certified) (A bit overkill for non-SLI, but I got a good price for it.)
*Fans - Corsair AF120's (x2) and AF140's (x4), White Edition LED
*OS - Windows 10 Home, 64 Bit
Top reviews from other countries
I decided to pay a little more and used prime for everything else but RAM, as they didn't have the type I wanted when I required it.
In my case I have been lucky and was supplied a processor that will clock and stay at a very high frequency, when compared to a friends identical unit (although cooling it efficiently for extended periods at the top end of those very high frequencies can be a challenge)
This processor arrived, factory sealed and was ,most importantly, undamaged, and I probably should have gone with Amazon from the start of my build as there usually aren't any hassles if something goes wrong.
Demand made prices pretty insane for a while, it looks to *SOMETIMES* come down in price considerably.
*It's worth tracking the price as i'm writing this edit near the end of April 2016, and there should be plenty of these around now.
On to the processor - It's pretty powerful, whilst able to operate functionally at very low power if you want it to.
I have heard that it isn't always sold in a sealed retail box. Mine was.
Always check this *before you buy* if you are paying the full RRP.
The sealed boxed version attracts a three year warranty (at least that is what my box says)
This may not suit someone who wants the dial at 11 24/7, I did manage a (quite nervous) overclock of 4.8 GHz on all four cores using 16 G 2666 DDR4 Ram and I'm using a pretty standard Z 170-A board in a budget, but adequate corsair case.
If I can achieve that with a budget motherboard, I'm sure others can do as well with better.
I eventually decided on keeping it at a more sensible at 4.2/3 G to ensure a longer service life and to keep my blood pressure stable:)
I found I had to add an extra inlet fan at the base of my case and top just to help with the overclocking and PCH/memory cooling - and I can turn this on or off as and when.
These extra fans are not required to be on if I'm not overclocking or just using the pc for basic everyday tasks.
I only override or manipulate CPU fan speeds to keep my quietest Noctua fans running at their most effective with this processor.
To be honest it's fine at 4 - 4.2 GHz and probably wiser to leave it there, long term
Remember all K (unlocked) processors need your own cooling kit and have no fan included in the box as the locked versions will.
To summarise:
The main advantages of this processor are really the speed of Ram it can handle and how it's much better at communicating with all the other motherboard components and systems.
This isn't the kind of processor you will always find yourself having to kill basic to moderate programs when wanting to run one heavy one, it can tackle being pushed quite hard.
I have not had a single blue screen,nor a major crash yet- since December last year. I did buy a new SSD and new Os so nothing was migrated from an old system until I knew it was stable.
It actually helps draw more performance (possibly with the aid of the Z170 motherboard) out of my last GPU to a level that make s it look like an upgraded card.
Z 170 On-board graphics v last gen seem a leap in static visual quality and clarity of fonts is very much improved on a good IPS monitor - a really capable and stoic raster that feels more alive to the eyes.
If someone wanted a really fast non-gaming general purpose pc,they might not need to add any additional graphics cards to the Z170 motherboards with this chip installed. Adding a SSD with the OS on it makes this fly.
It absolutely laughs at anything to do with productivity like word, and browsing with over 20 tabs open is no big deal ,and with a moderate level GPU it handles cad well.
If you have the cash for a good GPU and are a gamer or use graphic intensive programs, you probably already know the importance of a reasonable graphics card (or two)
Might be an idea to run a 64 bit browser on this if you want more stability and security.
Reservations (or things to think about) are mainly that you really do need to watch the temperatures on these skylakes,it's likely going to be the norm from now on at 14 nm when combined with higher clocking frequencies.
Cpu's that clock at much higher frequencies with smaller tracking will not tolerate being used to their full potential with poor cooling solutions.
A stock cooler on this would likely mean you have to use power management all the time and literally underclock it.
There are perhaps more robust previous gen processors at the high end at not much more price, but without the abilities in other areas like better on-board graphics for the chipset used , USB 3.1 and lower power consumption when in power saving modes.
It seems to score particularly high on Encryption.
In most benchmarks(when all voltages and freq's are fine) I do see a improvement over most of the last 4 core i7's
It does* not* outperform the six core last gen I7's on anything other than encryption and what frequency of ram that can be used,but it is very very near to a substantial performance in a comparison test.
When dual processor boards start to arrive, I envisage a lot of people dropping two of these in a system and that becoming a new trend.
Some fine tuning was required for the ram, but that was down to my first revision motherboard, and the fact everything has changed since my last self build.
With a Noctua Cpu fan and radiator this, idles at around 25-6 c for me.
I noticed very sudden fluctuations in temperature for 200-800 ms at above 10 C extra a time on individual cores with an extreme (air cooled) o/c (but never all cores at once) that should serve as a warning that these things are not to be pushed to "level silly" too much once you are sure all your voltages and temps are within 'safe' tolerances.
It's not worth frying this really nice processor for theoretical numbers to brag about that are not healthy for it and do not translate to stability.
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on December 30, 2015
I decided to pay a little more and used prime for everything else but RAM, as they didn't have the type I wanted when I required it.
In my case I have been lucky and was supplied a processor that will clock and stay at a very high frequency, when compared to a friends identical unit (although cooling it efficiently for extended periods at the top end of those very high frequencies can be a challenge)
This processor arrived, factory sealed and was ,most importantly, undamaged, and I probably should have gone with Amazon from the start of my build as there usually aren't any hassles if something goes wrong.
Demand made prices pretty insane for a while, it looks to *SOMETIMES* come down in price considerably.
*It's worth tracking the price as i'm writing this edit near the end of April 2016, and there should be plenty of these around now.
On to the processor - It's pretty powerful, whilst able to operate functionally at very low power if you want it to.
I have heard that it isn't always sold in a sealed retail box. Mine was.
Always check this *before you buy* if you are paying the full RRP.
The sealed boxed version attracts a three year warranty (at least that is what my box says)
This may not suit someone who wants the dial at 11 24/7, I did manage a (quite nervous) overclock of 4.8 GHz on all four cores using 16 G 2666 DDR4 Ram and I'm using a pretty standard Z 170-A board in a budget, but adequate corsair case.
If I can achieve that with a budget motherboard, I'm sure others can do as well with better.
I eventually decided on keeping it at a more sensible at 4.2/3 G to ensure a longer service life and to keep my blood pressure stable:)
I found I had to add an extra inlet fan at the base of my case and top just to help with the overclocking and PCH/memory cooling - and I can turn this on or off as and when.
These extra fans are not required to be on if I'm not overclocking or just using the pc for basic everyday tasks.
I only override or manipulate CPU fan speeds to keep my quietest Noctua fans running at their most effective with this processor.
To be honest it's fine at 4 - 4.2 GHz and probably wiser to leave it there, long term
Remember all K (unlocked) processors need your own cooling kit and have no fan included in the box as the locked versions will.
To summarise:
The main advantages of this processor are really the speed of Ram it can handle and how it's much better at communicating with all the other motherboard components and systems.
This isn't the kind of processor you will always find yourself having to kill basic to moderate programs when wanting to run one heavy one, it can tackle being pushed quite hard.
I have not had a single blue screen,nor a major crash yet- since December last year. I did buy a new SSD and new Os so nothing was migrated from an old system until I knew it was stable.
It actually helps draw more performance (possibly with the aid of the Z170 motherboard) out of my last GPU to a level that make s it look like an upgraded card.
Z 170 On-board graphics v last gen seem a leap in static visual quality and clarity of fonts is very much improved on a good IPS monitor - a really capable and stoic raster that feels more alive to the eyes.
If someone wanted a really fast non-gaming general purpose pc,they might not need to add any additional graphics cards to the Z170 motherboards with this chip installed. Adding a SSD with the OS on it makes this fly.
It absolutely laughs at anything to do with productivity like word, and browsing with over 20 tabs open is no big deal ,and with a moderate level GPU it handles cad well.
If you have the cash for a good GPU and are a gamer or use graphic intensive programs, you probably already know the importance of a reasonable graphics card (or two)
Might be an idea to run a 64 bit browser on this if you want more stability and security.
Reservations (or things to think about) are mainly that you really do need to watch the temperatures on these skylakes,it's likely going to be the norm from now on at 14 nm when combined with higher clocking frequencies.
Cpu's that clock at much higher frequencies with smaller tracking will not tolerate being used to their full potential with poor cooling solutions.
A stock cooler on this would likely mean you have to use power management all the time and literally underclock it.
There are perhaps more robust previous gen processors at the high end at not much more price, but without the abilities in other areas like better on-board graphics for the chipset used , USB 3.1 and lower power consumption when in power saving modes.
It seems to score particularly high on Encryption.
In most benchmarks(when all voltages and freq's are fine) I do see a improvement over most of the last 4 core i7's
It does* not* outperform the six core last gen I7's on anything other than encryption and what frequency of ram that can be used,but it is very very near to a substantial performance in a comparison test.
When dual processor boards start to arrive, I envisage a lot of people dropping two of these in a system and that becoming a new trend.
Some fine tuning was required for the ram, but that was down to my first revision motherboard, and the fact everything has changed since my last self build.
With a Noctua Cpu fan and radiator this, idles at around 25-6 c for me.
I noticed very sudden fluctuations in temperature for 200-800 ms at above 10 C extra a time on individual cores with an extreme (air cooled) o/c (but never all cores at once) that should serve as a warning that these things are not to be pushed to "level silly" too much once you are sure all your voltages and temps are within 'safe' tolerances.
It's not worth frying this really nice processor for theoretical numbers to brag about that are not healthy for it and do not translate to stability.
With this work load I was tempted to fork over the extra money to buy a 6 core i7-6800k or i7-6850k and move to the X-99 platform. As that seems to be the recommended route of most tech review Youtubers for my use. But being on a budget at the time I went for the Z170 platform. Now I can confidently say that I made a good choice, and my system performance is amazing. I never hit serious bottle-necks where my CPU is holding me back.
I also do some light gaming and with my EVGA GTX 960 ACX 2.0 FTW 4GB and I get great 1080p performance. Although I do have an i5-6600k system with a GTX 980 Ti 6GB that I use far more for gaming, and it has better in game performance than this system. I’d recommend to those looking to buy this CPU and who plan to primarily use their system for gaming to go with a i5-6600k or the new i5-7600k at the most. Especially if you’re on a budget, I think it's a bit overkill to go with an i7. As pretty much all gaming experiences aren't as limited by CPU's, but instead by GPU performance. I would spend the money saved buying an i5 on a better graphics card. But if you can afford the i7 with a great GPU then definitely go for it, this advice is for those who are building on a budget. As gaming is not my primary use at all for this build I did not spend much on my GPU but just got a good value card and spent the extra money to buy this i7-6700k.
I've water-cooled this processor with the Cooler Master MasterLiquid Pro 240 and am overclocked at 4.7GHz at 1.360V. I never have any thermal throttling or system stability issues. After 4 hours of stress testing on Aida64 I had an average CPU temperature of 69 degrees C. So for those looking to overclock this CPU I definitely would recommend a 240mm AIO CPU cooler. Or at least a big air cooled heat sink. When I first built this system I was using the Cooler Master Hyper 212 EVO, (which is an amazing cooler) but without any overclocking I was hitting even higher temps in day-to-day use than I'm hitting now; even with the 4.7GHz overclock. Overall this is arguably the best 4 core CPU you can buy and I'm very pleased with his purchase!
To those looking to upgrade from the SkyLake i7-6700k to the KabyLake i7-7700k there is really no need. Yes the overclocking potential is higher on the new i7, but, when compared at the same frequency both processors are nearly identical and have the same core-to-core performance. Same goes with the SkyLake i5-6600k and KabyLake i5-7600k.
If anyone has questions feel free to ask! My system has pretty much completely changed since first building it (as shown).
(I also have a review of the i5-6600k with system pictures)
Reviewed in Canada on August 16, 2016
With this work load I was tempted to fork over the extra money to buy a 6 core i7-6800k or i7-6850k and move to the X-99 platform. As that seems to be the recommended route of most tech review Youtubers for my use. But being on a budget at the time I went for the Z170 platform. Now I can confidently say that I made a good choice, and my system performance is amazing. I never hit serious bottle-necks where my CPU is holding me back.
I also do some light gaming and with my EVGA GTX 960 ACX 2.0 FTW 4GB and I get great 1080p performance. Although I do have an i5-6600k system with a GTX 980 Ti 6GB that I use far more for gaming, and it has better in game performance than this system. I’d recommend to those looking to buy this CPU and who plan to primarily use their system for gaming to go with a i5-6600k or the new i5-7600k at the most. Especially if you’re on a budget, I think it's a bit overkill to go with an i7. As pretty much all gaming experiences aren't as limited by CPU's, but instead by GPU performance. I would spend the money saved buying an i5 on a better graphics card. But if you can afford the i7 with a great GPU then definitely go for it, this advice is for those who are building on a budget. As gaming is not my primary use at all for this build I did not spend much on my GPU but just got a good value card and spent the extra money to buy this i7-6700k.
I've water-cooled this processor with the Cooler Master MasterLiquid Pro 240 and am overclocked at 4.7GHz at 1.360V. I never have any thermal throttling or system stability issues. After 4 hours of stress testing on Aida64 I had an average CPU temperature of 69 degrees C. So for those looking to overclock this CPU I definitely would recommend a 240mm AIO CPU cooler. Or at least a big air cooled heat sink. When I first built this system I was using the Cooler Master Hyper 212 EVO, (which is an amazing cooler) but without any overclocking I was hitting even higher temps in day-to-day use than I'm hitting now; even with the 4.7GHz overclock. Overall this is arguably the best 4 core CPU you can buy and I'm very pleased with his purchase!
To those looking to upgrade from the SkyLake i7-6700k to the KabyLake i7-7700k there is really no need. Yes the overclocking potential is higher on the new i7, but, when compared at the same frequency both processors are nearly identical and have the same core-to-core performance. Same goes with the SkyLake i5-6600k and KabyLake i5-7600k.
If anyone has questions feel free to ask! My system has pretty much completely changed since first building it (as shown).
(I also have a review of the i5-6600k with system pictures)
-1080p gaming at ultra settings; though I should also note that this is paired with a 1070. You could easily achieve similar settings with this CPU and a 1060, but I figured 1070 would last longer)
-Extremely fast with Photoshop, but to be fair I mostly just practice 2D pixel art, it still works fast! :p
-Works flawlessly with single-threaded applications and In this aspect it beats a lot of its CPU higher-cored colleagues
-Works excellent with Visual Studio! Although, I should note I keep all my software on a SSD - food for thought
This CPU is also capable of running very cool: it runs at 23 degrees Celsius when idle, and I never seen it go above 48 degrees, mind you, I am using a H100i v2 liquid cooler- I am certain similar results could be found with a good air cooler as well)
I have found multi-tasking to be a breeze with this computer: I had several applications open while playing Fallout 4 and didn't stutter nor cause the fans to howl in protest
This CPU is capable of overclocking, but 4.2 ghz is fine for me - I question the software not the CPU, espcially when a CPU with 4 cores and hyperthreading @ 4.2ghz are not enough, again that's just in regards to the things I generally use. Reportedly the golden overclock for this CPU is 4.5ghz, though I have seen several users report having stable over clocks at close to 5ghz.
The 6700k also supports DDR4, this was the big draw- if not the only draw for a lot of Haswell CPU users to upgrade. I paired my CPU with 16GB of 2133MHZ Ram leading to a smooth and enjoyable user experience, but I have yet to see real difference over DDR3 memory, yet.
To conclude: this is an awesome quad-core i7 that is able to meet my needs as a professional geek who does some programming and gaming.
Decided to leave the budget tagline behind and make a switch back to intel as I have an i7 5930k in my gaming setup and rave about it's performance in and out of games. This 6th series Skylake chip though... this just plows through everything!! Even had me thinking twice about handing it over my brother when it was finished... haha
Pair this with any GPU on the market and it will tear any game a new one! Stands toe to toe with my 5930k, hell it wouldn't surprise me if it beat it in most cases! Performance next to the 880k is lightyears ahead, obviously but AMD can't even touch this with their top tier offerings! Sorry fanboys, I used to be an AMD nut back in the day when they could make stuff to rival Intel but now? INTEL, INTEL, INTEL!! ;)
Paired with a basic MSI B150m Mortar mobo as I didn't want or need to OC and 16gb of Vengeance 2133mhz ram I had laying about and it's a killer machine. Sprung new life into my old GTX 770 which as it happens still kills most games at 1080p max settings these days!
Anyone who says CPU doesn't make a blindest bit of difference in games needs a reality check. This chip rocks and looks like I may have to pick up another for a second gaming rig of mine!! ;)
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on August 5, 2016
Decided to leave the budget tagline behind and make a switch back to intel as I have an i7 5930k in my gaming setup and rave about it's performance in and out of games. This 6th series Skylake chip though... this just plows through everything!! Even had me thinking twice about handing it over my brother when it was finished... haha
Pair this with any GPU on the market and it will tear any game a new one! Stands toe to toe with my 5930k, hell it wouldn't surprise me if it beat it in most cases! Performance next to the 880k is lightyears ahead, obviously but AMD can't even touch this with their top tier offerings! Sorry fanboys, I used to be an AMD nut back in the day when they could make stuff to rival Intel but now? INTEL, INTEL, INTEL!! ;)
Paired with a basic MSI B150m Mortar mobo as I didn't want or need to OC and 16gb of Vengeance 2133mhz ram I had laying about and it's a killer machine. Sprung new life into my old GTX 770 which as it happens still kills most games at 1080p max settings these days!
Anyone who says CPU doesn't make a blindest bit of difference in games needs a reality check. This chip rocks and looks like I may have to pick up another for a second gaming rig of mine!! ;)



![Intel Core i7 6700K 4.00 GHz Unlocked Quad Core Skylake Desktop Processor, Socket LGA 1151 [BX80662I76700K] (Renewed)](https://images-na.ssl-images-amazon.com/images/I/81grWqOTnDL._AC_UL160_SR160,160_.jpg)





































