Is i7-3770 Ivy Bridge?
The Intel Core i7-3770 is a desktop processor with 4 cores, launched in April 2012. It is part of the Core i7 lineup, using the Ivy Bridge architecture with Socket 1155. Thanks to Intel Hyper-Threading the core-count is effectively doubled, to 8 threads.
What’s the difference between Ivy and Sandy Bridge?
Ivy Bridge is slightly faster than Sandy Bridge, takes slightly less power, and has more advanced graphics (not graphics that will please avid and dedicated gamers, but better graphics all the same). Essentially, Ivy Bridge is Sandy Bridge all cleaned up and perfected ever so slightly.
Is Haswell better than Sandy Bridge?
Compared to Sandy Bridge, Haswell looks even more impressive. The Core i7-4770K outperforms the i7-2700K by 7 – 26%, with an average performance advantage of 17%.
Can Ivy Bridge work on Sandy Bridge motherboard?
Putting a Sandy Bridge CPU in a motherboard designed for Ivy Bridge should not be a problem at all. The only difference is that the PCI-e 3.0 slot will operate in PCI-e 2.0 mode because Sandy Bridge CPUs do not support PCI-e 3.0.
What is the power consumption of an i7 3770k?
Power Consumption Comparison. Intel DZ77GA-70K. Idle. Load (x264 2nd pass) Intel Core i7 3770K. 80.1W. 146.4W. Intel Core i7 2700K. 79.4W.
Is Ivy Bridge better than Core i7 2700K?
But we also know that Ivy Bridge should be capable of delivering better (or at least similar) performance in a significantly lower thermal envelope. In this case, the -3770K is a 77 W part, whereas Core i7-2700K is a 95 W processor and the Sandy Bridge-E-based chips are rated for 130 W.
Is the i7-3770k really that much faster than the 2700K?
We now know that, as a host processor, Core i7-3770K really isn’t that much faster than Core i7-2700K. But we also know that Ivy Bridge should be capable of delivering better (or at least similar) performance in a significantly lower thermal envelope.
Is the core i7-3770k Intel’s fastest mobile processor?
But today’s Core i7-3770K review doesn’t cover a mobile processor. Rather, we’re looking at Intel’s fastest multiplier-unlocked model, positioned to succeed the existing Core i7-2700K and -2600K. Intel built Sandy Bridge-based chips in three different configurations: one quad-core and two dual-core designs.