As promised here are some quick and duty benchmarks numbers for the new 6th Gen Core-i7.
Please note: 4770k benchmarks were preformed on Windows 7 64bit, where as new benchmarks were done on Windows 10 64bit.
MAME 0.164 64bit:
4770k @ 4.0ghz gen6 @ 4.0ghz gen6 @ 4.8ghz
Biltz 290.58 321.35 377.20 Dolphin 40.39 44.63 52.34 Gauntleg 378.72 440.78 516.63 Gardius4 232.98 255.83 305.57 Propcycl 169.62 179.04 207.42 Radikalb 240.66 269.81 324.87 Scud 87.87 94.74 111.01 Starsldr 106.32 118.32 141.64
MAME 0.141 64bit: (for reference with old benchmarks)
4770k @ 4.0ghz Gen6 @ 4.0ghz 4770k @ 4.8ghz gen6 @ 4.8ghz
Biltz 312.07 321.35 369.40 377.20 Dolphin 46.96 44.63 49.36 52.34 Gauntleg 420.95 440.78 503.17 516.63 Gardius4 244.74 255.83 290.16 305.57 Propcycl 257.43 179.04 303.46 207.42 Radikalb 268.90 269.81 319.78 324.87 Scud 145.91 94.74 174.07 111.01 Starsldr 84.68 118.32 101.34 141.64
There is defiantly a 7-10% gain in Performance per clock, but I was hoping for more.
The 4.8ghz overclock was quick in duty it was not stable in Prime95, CPU was rock solid at 4.5ghz, but overclock was likely limited to this by very average air cooling, and mid range motherboard VRM.
Water cooling, possibly a Delid, Overclocking motherboard with better VRM, and more time spend tweaking voltages will likely result in better overclocks at a later date.
If all else fails, Burn the manual.
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