Intel cpu question

socian

Honorable
Apr 16, 2012
10
0
10,510
CPU: Intel Core i5 2400
Operating System: Microsoft® Windows 7 Home Premium 64-bit
Motherboard: Asus P8H61-M LE/USB3
Memory: 4GB DDR3 1333mhz (1x 4GB)
Hard Drives: 500GB S-ATAII 3.0Gb/s
Optical Drive: 22x DVD±RW DL S-ATA
Graphics card: NVIDIA GeForce GTX 550 Ti 1GB
Sound card: Onboard 7.1 Audio
Case: Xigmatek Asgard
PSU: 400W Xigmatek
Warranty: 3 Year Platinum Warranty

now what i want to know is if i will have any problems with an Intel Core i7 2600K insted of the Intel Core i5 2400?
 
you can use a i7-2600k but your really putting a very powerful chip on a not so powerful platform. you cannot over clock with a H61 chipset and that is a rather weak GPU.
 
It's really going to depend on what he's doing. In my software development work, compile performance easily scales with thread count, thus there's a very noticeable difference between a 2500K and a 2600K. In gaming, it's not going to make a huge difference.
 
Stick with the 2400, don't believe you will get much from a 2600K if you are not benchmarking or running applications that run up the thread counts. For general usage and gaming the 2400 will surfice.

PSU: Corsair CX500, good unit for a single card setup.
GPU: GTX 560 SC or 560Ti at least or a Radeon HD 7850 OC
 
An i7 2xxx will work in your system no problem, but a couple of points to bear in mind:

- There's no point in getting the k version because with your current platform you will not be able to overclock it. If you plan to get a z or p platform later, then by all means, but otherwise, save a bit of cash and get the non-k

- Consider whether it's really worth it. If you do lots of video editing, transcoding or modelling, then an i7 will deliver a worthwhile performance increase over an i5. If it's for general use or games, the i5 2400 is a pretty useful chip already, and an i7 will offer no tangible benefit

- Any of the above scenarios in which I argue that an i7 would be worthwhile, it would also be worth upgrading your RAM to 8GB. If it's only for games, 4GB is enough
 


i mostly want the computer for games but i want to upgrade the hardware when i have some extra money and with the i7 i can use the latest hardware if i want or need to at least that was what my friend told me 😀
 

+1
even an i3 can handle ANY hardware out there expect a high end multi card graphics solution.
you're better off keeping the i5 2400 and getting a better gpu.