PCWorld reports that several overclockers wanted to get their hands on the chip and take it to its limits. One of them happened to be Roman Hartung, who continued to pour liquid nitrogen until it reached a stable temperature of -110 degrees Celsius. If the temperature dropped any further, then the processor would have forced the system to shutdown in order to prevent further damage from taking place.
Intel Core i7-6950X managed to run at a stable 5.2GHz, but overclockers decided that they wanted to push the boundaries even further and successfully managed to reach a clock speed of 5.7GHz. In order for the overclockers to reach such a clock speed, they have to enter the BIOS of the motherboard and manually trigger settings that will prevent the chip from becoming unstable at such high frequencies. One of them happen to be disabling Intel’s power reduction feature, and increase the processor’s voltage delivery.
Core i7-6950X features a TDP of 140W and if costs an unbelievable $1,723. If this processor is out of your budget, and we’re assuming that it is going to be the case for several of you, Intel also managed to announce two more processors that belong to the Broadwell-E platform:
Intel Core i7-6900K (8 core processor with 16 threads) Intel Core i7-6850K (6 core processor with 12 threads)
Intel claims that it’s twice as fast as the quad-core i7-6700K when it comes to 3D rendering, and 35 percent faster than the last-gen Core i7-5960X. In terms of editing 4K video, it’s 65 percent faster than that same quad-core chip and 25 percent faster than the previous i7 Extreme Edition. Since you’re also going to be using the processor for gaming purposes, this chip is 25 percent faster than the 5960X when it comes to gaming in 4K while encoding and broadcasting a 1080p Twitch stream.
What Intel forgot to point out was that its latest flagship processor is also great at overclocking.