Tuesday, September 28th 2021

Silicon Lottery Store Offering Prebinned Intel & AMD Processors Shutting Down

Silicon Lottery is a boutique online store offering prebinned Intel and AMD CPUs that have been tested to reach guaranteed clock speeds when overclocked. The store has been operating for seven years but have recently announced that they will be ceasing operation on October 31st. This news comes as the culmination of multiple factors that have been impacting the store including a shift from Intel to prebin their K-series processors reducing their overclocking potential. This maximization of existing silicon also meant that there was limited opportunity for the store to find enough faster processors to sell. The final influence was the move by Intel to switch from thermal compound under the IHS to solder Tim with their 9th generation CPUs which severely limits the thermal advantages gained from delidding. The general component shortages and delays associated with the COVID-19 pandemic have also impacted the business, the complete statement from Silicon Lottery can be found below.
Silicon LotteryOur online store will be closing on October 31, 2021. Any orders placed for our delidding service will need to be delivered to us by November 30, 2021 for completion. For warranty or other assistance after we close the store, contact us at the email listed on your packing slip.

We have had a fantastic time these past seven years at Silicon Lottery. This business has grown and made an impact on so many people, more than I ever imagined was possible. I personally appreciate all of you that I've been able to talk with over these years, from troubleshooting to general questions to speculation. It's been so easy to connect with so many of you through this hobby we share.

We're shutting down not for just one reason, but for a combination of many. As you may be aware, overclocking headroom has been dwindling these past several years with manufacturers offering higher frequencies at stock, better boosting algorithms, and tighter bins between models which reduces overclock frequency variation (the 11900K is essentially a binned 11700K, so with the 11900K we're binning what has already been fairly heavily binned). This type of product segmentation is nothing new, but having such minor differences between two models is a more recent shift. Intel has also switched from a polymer TIM back to a solder TIM starting with their 9th generation CPUs, which has reduced the thermal benefits achieved from delidding. In addition, supply issues have taken a major toll on us, even before the pandemic started. Our orders with distributors for the last few releases have been nightmares of delays upon delays.

With all of this in mind, sales have fallen below the point where it makes sense for us to keep the store open. We know many of you are eagerly wanting Alder Lake CPUs, and we're sorry that we won't be able to fulfill your needs this time. We have seen your emails rolling in these past couple of weeks, and we're sorry for not getting back to you guys earlier as we've been busy juggling this decision.

While we will be closed for the foreseeable future, it's not necessarily goodbye forever. If things change in the market, in particular if overclocking headroom and variation increases for whatever reason, it's possible we will get things rolling again.

We wish all of you the best, and to keep having fun tweaking hardware!
Source: Silicon Lottery
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26 Comments on Silicon Lottery Store Offering Prebinned Intel & AMD Processors Shutting Down

#26
chrcoluk
On my 2600x I couldnt even match stock clock/voltage manually never mind an o/c, AMD really got the most out of these chips out the factory, to me when they aggressively tuned out of the box it is a good thing, I have never been a fan of silicon lotteries (I guess because I usually lose them).

Also with multiple overclocked or undervolted chips I have seen chips been stable for many years under windows, no BSOD, no WHEA errors etc. then boot up linux on them and sudden page faults or segfaults that go away when the chip is put back to stock, for whatever reason windows seems more lenient on unstable setups, and I do wonder how many overclocked systems out there are actually not 100%.

The latest example is my 2600x was undervolted and ran windows fine for years, I have now repurposed it as a proxmox hypervisor and was getting random pagefaults during p-state transitions, when I removed the undervolt its been fine since.
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