TheOverclocker Issue 35 | Page 24

was shown operating at 1.35V. That is either one very special CPU or one that was showing immense promise which then had its IHS removed to increase the overclocking headroom. So no, the 5GHz CPU overclocking days are not back unfortunately. It doesn’t mean however that if you are still on a Sandy-Bridge platform with a 5GHz CPU - that an upgrade is pointless. Purely from a connectivity point of view it is likely worth your effort to look into the Z170 motherboards and the 6700K CPU. Most high end motherboards, feature two M.2 ports, some USB 3.1, newer and better INTEL network controller chips and better audio, NVMe support and many more native USB 3.0 ports. These are likely not available on your present platform and even though you have the 5GHz CPU clock, your memory clock, is significantly lower and so is the CPU IPC. Thus you’re probably due for an upgrade and the Core i7 6700K and Z170 motherboard are perhaps the ideal time to make the switch. 24 The OverClocker Issue 35 | 2015 For the ones that were using Haswell systems, odds are you already have a short upgrade cycle and you’ll sooner, rather than later upgrade in which case as stated previously. Don’t expect a fundamentally different experience at all. Your performance will not be rewarded in proportion to your investment. This is perhaps what leads us back to the 5820K and the performance data. As you can see, for the most part in gaming, a standard 5820K is a little behind what the 6700K delivers. Mind you that the difference in operating fre VV