Intel’s Core i7-9700K starts at a lower base frequency of 3.6GHz, but it’s not uncommon to hit 5GHz or more on all eight cores. Intel, on the other hand, restricts overclocking to the expensive K-variants of its CPU lineup.ĪMD’s Ryzen 7 2700X features a base frequency of 3.7 GHz, and we managed to get another 500MHz out of our sample before hitting the voltage limitations. All AMD Ryzen processors come unlocked from the factory, which means you can take the cheapest Ryzen CPU and push it to new limits. Intel and AMD both support overclocking, but each company has a different philosophy about the practice. Intel Skylake-X: Battle of the High-End CPUs Overclocking Potential Intel 9th Gen Core: Which CPU Deserves Your Money? Intel’s options are restrictive and somewhat elitist, which arbitrarily raises the entry costs for Intel-based setups. Winner: AMD offers the better platform for motherboard choice. However, we wouldn’t expect to see the same kind of performance gains as you would with an enthusiast-grade X470 motherboard. Every Ryzen processor comes unlocked from the factory, and you can overclock them with any motherboard with any chipset, save the lowest-end A320. And the X370 and X470 are the high-performance options with all the bells and whistles, including support for dual-graphics card configurations.ĪMD doesn’t limit overclocking to the top-of-the-line hardware, though. The B350 and B450 chipsets are performance-oriented options that don’t support multi-GPU configurations. The A300 and A330 chipsets are meant for budget-minded consumers who require just the bare minimum. The Z370 (with the latest BIOS installed) supports the new Core i7-9700K, but the new Z390 chipset offers additional features such as native USB 3.1 Gen2 ports and integrated Wireless-AC 2x2 160 MHz WiFi hardware.ĪMD also offers a wide selection of chipset options for different use cases. Intel doesn’t allow you to overclock your processor unless you have a motherboard equipped with one of Intel’s top-tier Z-series chipsets. The Intel B360 (and iterative B365), H370 and Q370 chipsets offer varying features for different situations, but you shouldn’t even consider those options with the Core i7-9700K, because none of them let you overclock. It technically supports the top-tier Core i9-9900K, but it forgoes features such as Optane memory support, PCIe 3.0, and more than two DIMMs for memory to keep the costs down. Intel’s H310 is the company’s budget-class 300-series chipset. Intel’s 9th generation Core processors share the Intel 300-Series chipsets with the 8th generation processors, which means you have several possible motherboard options to pair with a Core i7-9700K. In a matchup between the Core i7-9700K and the Ryzen 7 2700X, we have to give AMD the slight edge because both platforms offer dynamic core clock adjustments, but Ryzen features eight cores and 16 threads, whereas Intel’s i7 doesn’t offer thread doubling like AMD. These new chips are built on the same 14nm++ manufacturing process as the 8th generation CPUs. The improved thermal interface doesn’t enable much extra headroom for overclocking, but it allowed Intel to add two extra cores without deploying a smaller manufacturing process. Intel’s 9th generation Core processors now also feature solder-based thermal interface material (STIM), which in theory should improve heat dissipation. We ran DDR4-3466 for our i7-9700K review. Although, you should have no trouble running much faster memory. Intel’s 9th Generation Core architecture supports DDR4-2666 memory speeds, which is somewhat lower than the new Ryzen platform. The Core i7-9700K features a base frequency of 3.6 GHz, which can reach a boost clock of 4.9GHz in single threaded applications, 4.8GHz across two cores, or 4.7GHz across four cores, and 4.6GHz on all eight cores. Unfortunately, the new Core i7-9700K doesn't support Hyper-threading (that technology went to the new i9-9900K only), which means that it has half as many threads as its AMD competitor. Integrated UHD Graphics GT2(Base/Boost MHz)Īfter trailing AMD's eight-core 16-thread Ryzen CPUs in core count for a couple of generations, Intel gave its Core i7 and Core i9 9th generation CPUs the same eight physical cores.
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