Core i7-5775C Priced at $479.99
Broadwell based Desktop Core i5-5675C and Core i7-5775C will be available during the launch of Computex in the first week of June. These processors already have been spotted in OEM, but for retail they are now listing in price engines. The Core i7-5775C is however in pre-order for $479.99 .
Broadwell based ICs will get four cores, IGP wise the Iris Pro 6200 and JEDEC DDR3 1600 MHz support. And again all models will get a 65W TDP, which is lower compared to Haswell with its 84W/95W TDP. Versions with the 'C" extension are the desktop LGA 1150 models, the 'R" models get a BGA socket. The C models will come with an unlocked multiplier (in the past that was K or X model). The models will get 4MB L3 cache but no hyper-threading for the Core i5 model. Check out the following overview I have compiled for you.
The new Broadwell SKus will be compatible with the Series 9 motherboards and Socket 1150 and are released in the retail channel on June 1st (NA, EMEA), and June 2nd (APAC). The i7-5775C and the i5-5675C are quad-core chips.
Earlier this week we already have seen the flagship SKU overclock to 4.8 Ghz on air cooling. The Broadwell processors are listed on several etailers such as NCIX. And hey, pre-order prices .. ok ? Of course they will be lower once launched.
Model | Cores / Threads | Clock / Turbo | L3-cache | IGP | Memory | Tdp | Socket |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Core i5-5575R | 4 / 4 | 2,8 / 3,3GHz | 4MB | Iris Pro 6200 | ddr3l-1600 | 65W | BGA1364 |
Core i5-5675C | 4 / 4 | 3,1 / 3,6GHz | 4MB | Iris Pro 6200 | ddr3l-1600 | 65W | LGA1150 |
Core i5-5675R | 4 / 4 | 3,1 / 3,6GHz | 4MB | Iris Pro 6200 | ddr3l-1600 | 65W | BGA1364 |
Core i7-5775C | 4 / 8 | 3,3 / 3,7GHz | 6MB | Iris Pro 6200 | ddr3l-1600 | 65W | LGA1150 |
Core i7-5775R | 4 / 8 | 3,3 / 3,8GHz | 6MB | Iris Pro 6200 | ddr3l-1600 | 65W | BGA1364 |
Intel Core i7-5775C Broadwell reaches 5 GHz OC on Air - 05/14/2015 12:36 PM
The first Broadwel based Intel Core i7-5775C has been spotted and overclocked. The Core i5-5675C and the Core i7-5775C should be out in stores real soon. Overclockers should be happy as the 14nm B...
Intel Skylake Core i7-6700K Benchmarks - 04/29/2015 05:15 PM
A website called pcfrm shared Intel Skylake Core i7-6700K Benchmarks. The 6th generation core series processor will be the successor to Broadwell. The top-dog quad-core processor would be the Core ...
Core i7-6700K and Core i5-6600K SkyLake Specs ? - 04/22/2015 09:03 AM
There is a bit of controversy on the web at the moment as some info appeared on the web regarding Intel's upcoming Skylake lineup. The information claims the existence of a Core i7-6700K and Core i...
Intel Broadwell Core i7-5775C & Core i5-5675C released mid-may - 04/19/2015 10:09 AM
There has been a lot of talk about Intel Broadwell processors. In specifically for the PC side of things, 14nm desktop Broadwell processors in the form of the Core i7-5775C & Core i5-5675C. These...
Need a Beast of a PC ? GamingPC Releases 4.4 GHz Core i7-5960X Gaming System - 09/06/2014 10:59 AM
Got cash to burn ? GamingPC introduces The Beast, a water-cooled 8 core Intel's new 5960X clocked at 4.4 GHz, 64 gigs of GSkill DDR4 memory and 4 x NVIDIA GeForce Titan Black in Quad-SLI built for ...
Senior Member
Posts: 4194
Joined: 2006-10-11
*waits longer*
Senior Member
Posts: 3970
Joined: 2005-08-22
Same here, 2-3 years.
Senior Member
Posts: 214
Joined: 2014-06-11
Still not much of an improvement over my good ole' 3930K. When will Intel bring us the real next generation of their processors? Is it because their only competition is primarily focused on APU solutions and not competing with Intel CPUs?
I guess these baby steps from Intel will just continue to keep my money in the bank.
Senior Member
Posts: 1295
Joined: 2007-03-29
Everyone says this new CPU is comparable to a 2500K and up (somewhat).. How much better is the 2500 and 2600 vs my 920 @ 3.8? Am I being left in the dust for CPU power?
Senior Member
Posts: 1377
Joined: 2014-07-22
Honestly, though, I think what happens with the "E"s is fairly positive...note that they are only recent additions to the Vishera line...and I think that's because AMD has been increasing yields to the point where they can bin a sizable number of 125W cpus which will run just as fast--or about as fast--at a TDP of 95W...! That indicates really excellent yields on the process--I would think. Plus, my old cpu, an FX-6300 was not an E but TDP'ed at 95W just the same, and I had little trouble clocking it to ~4.5GHz with stock cooling & voltage settings (auto would max it at 1.45v or so.)
I enjoyed this very brief article on overclocking the 8320e. It was weird--I stumbled on this article after I bought the new stuff--and the guy's using the exact hardware I bought...