Instalar o Steam
Iniciar sessão
|
Idioma
简体中文 (Chinês Simplificado)
繁體中文 (Chinês Tradicional)
日本語 (Japonês)
한국어 (Coreano)
ไทย (Tailandês)
Български (Búlgaro)
Čeština (Checo)
Dansk (Dinamarquês)
Deutsch (Alemão)
English (Inglês)
Español-España (Espanhol de Espanha)
Español-Latinoamérica (Espanhol da América Latina)
Ελληνικά (Grego)
Français (Francês)
Italiano (Italiano)
Bahasa Indonesia (Indonésio)
Magyar (Húngaro)
Nederlands (Holandês)
Norsk (Norueguês)
Polski (Polaco)
Português (Brasil)
Română (Romeno)
Русский (Russo)
Suomi (Finlandês)
Svenska (Sueco)
Türkçe (Turco)
Tiếng Việt (Vietnamita)
Українська (Ucraniano)
Relatar problema de tradução
Intel didnt used cheap TIM because they want to save money. They used "cheap TIM" as Liquid Metal was to dengerous for a CPu that is thrown aorund with the packaging making it possible that under that force the liquid metal could get on the PCB and possibly cause damage by short circuit. The otherway was to use solder which sticks between die and IHS and has no chance to flow away. Problem with Sodler was that there was a high risk for micrcracking why they where forced to remove Solder.
Since 8700K even when stock clocks can run up a max TDP of approx 140-150 watts under full loads.
They couldn't continue to solder due to the small dye size and risk of cracking, the new paste isn't that bad, given it has to last a lifetime there are some compromises.
Changing out a stock thermal paste that comes with the heatsink Tova better one might at best save you a degree, risking liquid metal, which will erode the etching and void warranty may save you 3 degrees, the only way to get a really good reduction in temps is to delid resulting in 10-20 degree temp drops, but annihilates your warranty and risks bricking the chip, or fitting a better cooler, having push pull on a regular 30mm aio radiator doesn't actually make much difference over just 2 good fans as there is a limit to how much heat can be blown away from the fins on such a thin radiator and by the time you buy 4 good fans, you might as well just bought a bigger and better cooler with a larger surface area in the first place.
Push pull is used n custom loops with much thicker radiators where a single fan can struggle to keep pressure for the entire thickness, but custom rads are usually 45mm/60mm/80mm thick as opposed to the aio"s 30mm, which is often closer to 25mm at the actual fins.
For an 8700k you want to be using the big noctua cooler or ideally a 280-360mm aio.
can you make a screenshot? To be honest, I dont believe you. 1.100V for 4.4GHz would pretty much world record. It is lower then stock voltage.
PS: Run it in Prime 95. Cinebench is a bad way to test stability. P94 1344K is the actual best way to test it
Edit.
My bad stock is 4.3 n all cores but given half the time only 4 will be used in older games it is actually slower than stock ...