- Joined
- Mar 21, 2021
- Messages
- 3,878 (4.19/day)
- Location
- Colorado, U.S.A.
System Name | HP Compaq 8000 Elite CMT |
---|---|
Processor | Intel Core 2 Quad Q9550 |
Motherboard | Hewlett-Packard 3647h |
Memory | 16GB DDR3 |
Video Card(s) | Asus NVIDIA GeForce GT 1030 GDDR5 (fan-less) |
Storage | 2TB Micron SATA SSD; 2TB Seagate Firecuda 3.5" HDD |
Display(s) | Dell P2416D (2560 x 1440) |
Power Supply | 12V HP proprietary |
Software | Windows 10 Pro 64-bit |
Dang it Shrek, don't do this to me. A 13700K* will go from 20C to 100C, or thermally throttling in an air-conditioned room, in 92 ms. This is equivalent to around 18 million clock cycles for the P-cores, and just shy of 14 million E-core clock cycles at full turbo. Note that this is still less time than it takes you to blink once.
*Assuming pure silicon, a die .5mm thick, PL2, and no heat loss
92 ms is around a tenth of a second, so are we not talking around 300 million clock cycles?
Either way, a tad bigger than 1, so it seems to me we are agreeing.
Last edited: