• Welcome to TechPowerUp Forums, Guest! Please check out our forum guidelines for info related to our community.
  • The forums have been upgraded with support for dark mode. By default it will follow the setting on your system/browser. You may override it by scrolling to the end of the page and clicking the gears icon.

Intel Core i7-7700K Cracks 7 GHz Bench-Stable Overclock

btarunr

Editor & Senior Moderator
Staff member
Joined
Oct 9, 2007
Messages
47,863 (7.38/day)
Location
Dublin, Ireland
System Name RBMK-1000
Processor AMD Ryzen 7 5700G
Motherboard Gigabyte B550 AORUS Elite V2
Cooling DeepCool Gammax L240 V2
Memory 2x 16GB DDR4-3200
Video Card(s) Galax RTX 4070 Ti EX
Storage Samsung 990 1TB
Display(s) BenQ 1440p 60 Hz 27-inch
Case Corsair Carbide 100R
Audio Device(s) ASUS SupremeFX S1220A
Power Supply Cooler Master MWE Gold 650W
Mouse ASUS ROG Strix Impact
Keyboard Gamdias Hermes E2
Software Windows 11 Pro
It may have practically no IPC gains over its predecessor, but Intel's 7th generation Core "Kaby Lake" unlocked processors are shaping up to be an overclocker's delight. A Core i7-7700K sample tested by professional overclocker Allen "Splave" Golibersuch was able to breach the 7 GHz barrier. To achieve this feat however, HyperThreading was disabled, and two of the four CPU cores were also disabled.

Paired with an ASRock Z170 OC Formula motherboard, the i7-7700K was bench-stable at 7022.96 MHz, at the chip's maximum base clock multiplier of 69x, and a base-clock of 101.78 MHz. The Vcore voltage was set at a scorching 2.00V. The chip crunched PiFast in 9.02 seconds, SuperPi 32M in 4 minutes 20.25 seconds, wPrime 32M in 2.953 seconds, and wPrime 1024M in 1 minute 33.171 seconds. Paired with an ASUS GeForce GTX 1080 STRIX OC graphics card, it scored 643,316 points in Aquamark, and 86,798 points in 3DMark 05.



View at TechPowerUp Main Site
 
Are we back to Intel overclocking records to make news?

I hope AMD doesn't phenomenally fail, and go under the bulldozer.
 
..To achieve this feat however, HyperThreading was disabled, and two of the four CPU cores were also disabled.
Basically an overclocked i3 then, with no practical usage...
 
Full cores and HT or go away. Why not just have 1 core and claim 8GHz? :rolleyes: Even if it's just a highest clock bench, like for others, I only consider it valid if all cores and HT were used. If not, they've basically cheated their way to 7GHz...
 
Pretty much what everyone else said.

Its not a real over clock if you disable cores...
 
Lmao it's not a daily type cooling it benching big difference...

I would be happy to getting back in to ocing but it's expensive when you don't have sponsors and it's lots of fun killing stuff lol
 
You can definitely tell what kind of page this is. @EarthDog WTF?
 
1 core or 20 cores, its still a good overclocking feat.

I guess some people don't get the logistics of overclocking...
 
This is why TPU's hwbot team is dead.
Well, I tried last year. Now all of my relatively overclockable HW is gone.
What's really sad, is that after a year of doing nothing I went from #11 on TPU team up to #8 :banghead:
Not even sure if there are any active members left...
 
6.7ghz with everything enabled

eStsjl8.png
 
Look at dem volts!
 
2 of 4 cores disabled? Nope, sorry... doesn't count as a real overclock in my book.

Yep, meaningless in the practical sense. Interesting as a purely academic exercise. When are these chips released?
 
Yep, meaningless in the practical sense. Interesting as a purely academic exercise. When are these chips released?

Almost all benchmark runs are meaningless in the sense of general practicability. They prove a concept of speed and performance, nothing more.

As @EarthDog and @cdawall have lamented, it's not performed as an indicator of how fast the chips will run 24/7 but how fast they can run balls out.
 
Yes, I fully agree. The "concept of speed and performance," as you nicely put it are still interesting, but yes, of course, not for regular 24/7 usage.
 
I must say I would be impressed even if it was one core. To see a piece of silicon of that complexity hitting clocks in the 7GHz realm is quite something...
 
Only two cores working to achieve this? Ok fine. Well, why not simply disable all cores and see how high the clock circuit will go? I'm sure we could hit 10GHz or more with that. /sarcasm
 
Only two cores working to achieve this? Ok fine. Well, why not simply disable all cores and see how high the clock circuit will go? I'm sure we could hit 10GHz or more with that. /sarcasm

Heh, that's a great idea. I reckon at least 10GHz, probably more. /sarcasm
 
Back
Top