Is the i7 4970K worth if even if you are not going to overclock?

john52200

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Nov 19, 2014
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I saw something interesting the 4790 is 3.5GHZ base and 4790K is 4.0 GHZ base.

The 4790 can do 4 GHZ only with turbo boost but I am going out on a limb here and going to assume this makes it rather inferior to the K since turbo boost don't even work on all 4 cores and is nothing like a CPU manually clocked to 4 GHZ?
 
I wouldn't buy the i7 4790 instead of the i7 4790K.

It's clocked 1/10 less / the 4790K is clocked 11% higher and doesn't cost as much more. It's also more future proof since you can overclock it.

I wanted to say i7 4790 was a useless product and that I don't get why it even exist but supposedly it has support for trusted computing so if you need that and want integrated graphics that's your choice I guess.

If you just want to save the money and still have a hyper-threaded four core chip there's the Xeon E3 1231v3 which cost quite a bit less than the 4790, it's 3.4 rather than 3.6 GHz but at least the price difference against the i7 4790K is higher.
That's of course a server CPU so it have some other features among others support for ECC RAM. On the other hand it lacks the integrated graphics so I guess that make up the price difference.

Here's a comparison of all three:
http://ark.intel.com/sv/compare/80910,80807,80806

Personally I wouldn't consider the i7 4790.

If you're not going to over-clock and will use dedicated graphics then I think the E3 1231v3 is a good alternative to the i5 4690K. The i7 4790K is still a stronger chip and over-clockable so I don't really want to put that as equal to the E3 1231v3 or say that the E3 1231v3 is better choice.
 
Here in Sweden the price increase is more like 7% so I don't see why one would ever consider the i7 4790.
Except the "I need to have trusted computing"-part.
 

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