Maximum PC

INTEL CORE i7-4790K

Intel’s devilish quad-core all-rounder

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NORMALLY, buying the most expensive version of any CPU is for chumps. It means having your wallet hammered in return for a spec bump that’s more about scoring a PR win, than actually improving your end-user experience. Should you therefore be doubly wary of the Intel Core i7-4790K? After all, it’s just the top chip for Intel’s LGA1150 socket. It’s a stopgap replacemen­t for what was once the range-topping quad-core Intel Haswell CPU, the 4770K.

In fact, perhaps the only reason the 4790K even exists is because the 14nm Broadwell CPU architectu­re is running late in desktop format, and Intel wheeled it out for the sake of simply having something new to sell. Is it the ultimate PR processor?

That’s not entirely fair. The 4790K isn’t simply the same old Haswell quad-core chip taken from a better speed bin and running at slightly higher clocks. There’s more to the 4790K, and its so-called Devil’s Canyon sibling, the 4690K, than that.

The big news is an upgraded thermal interface material, or TIM. The TIM is a thermal material, which connects the CPU silicon with the metal heat spreader that forms the top of the CPU package, and interfaces with whatever cooler you're using. Arguably, the 4790K only benefits from an improved TIM because Intel had cheaped-out on the TIM for mainstream Haswell processor models. Plus, some argue it’s increased spacing between the silicon and heat spreader, not the TIM, that’s been the problem with Intel CPUs of late.

Either way, for the two Devil’s Canyon chips, Intel upgraded the TIM and in turn bumped up the clock speeds pretty dramatical­ly. Where the older 4770K was clocked nominally at 3.5GHz and 3.9GHz Turbo, the 4790K rocks in at 4GHz and 4.4GHz, respective­ly. By any metric, 500MHz is a healthy boost.

The consequenc­e is a quad-core, eightthrea­d CPU that looks pretty fast in almost any test. At stock clock speeds, it’s enough to make you wonder whether you really need that six-core 5820K CPU. After all, is the broader investment required for the upscale LGA2011v3 platform worth it to increase your video encoding grunt from 53 frames per second to 62?

What’s more, at these clocks and with the Haswell architectu­re, single-threaded performanc­e is simply monstrous. In fact, this Intel chip is about twice as fast in the Cinebench single-threaded test as the AMD processors in the lab this month. Not that they’re directly competitiv­e CPUs. But it does give you a flavor of the task AMD faces with its new Zen CPU architectu­re next year. AMD could take a big step forward and still be a fair way behind Intel.

PRICE PREMIUM

Still, if there’s a disappoint­ment with the 4790K, it involves overclocki­ng. The difficult thing with overclocki­ng, of course, is that it varies from chip to chip. You can’t simply apply sweeping generaliza­tions. For the record, our test chip tops out at 4.7GHz. But based on the 4790K chips we’ve seen ourselves, along with reports around the web, that seems fairly typical.

That’s both a little disappoint­ing in absolute terms, versus the standard factory clock speeds, and not dramatical­ly better than the 4.6GHz we’re used to seeing from the 4770K. So much for that upgraded TIM.

However, our main objection remains pricing, which, if anything, has crept up in retail reality recently. The top end of Intel’s mainstream platform has always felt expensive. At over $320, the 4790K is no exception. As things stand right now, its appeal as a primarily gaming CPU, compared to the 4690K, is marginal at best.

If gaming is what you’re all about, forget about the 4790K. If you’ve a broader remit, the 4790K makes more sense. But we’d suggest you spend a bit more and step up to the LGA2011v3 platform and the 5820K.

 ??  ?? A meaty chip, but we’d stick with the 4690K or pay up for the 5820K.
A meaty chip, but we’d stick with the 4690K or pay up for the 5820K.
 ??  ??

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