Much faster than what I had. Runs everything I want for now and the foreseeable future.
2014-10-19
J****k
As stated, great GPU, exceptional price for what you get!
2014-10-19
J****e
Much faster than what I had. Runs everything I want for now and the foreseeable future.
2014-10-19
J****n
Beast of a processor, even with the new i7-5000 series out--this chip still holds it's own and is arguably faster even when not overclocked.
2014-10-19
T****.
The Sonic the Hedgehog of processors. It's fantastical! I have no complaints. Does what it's supposed to and flawlessly.
2014-10-19
Jo****es
reallyy really fast !
2014-10-19
C.****en
I did a fair amount of research before I bought this processor and I decided to go for it for several reasons. It was unlocked (meaning I can choose to overclock it if I want), a lot of people have overclocked it and had it run very stable even on air. I'm not an overclocker but I like buying overclocking processors because if they are meant to be overclocked and run stable, they should run very stable if you don't overclock it. It also has a very high clock speed which may me choose this over several other i7s and i5s. For not much more money, you can get this beast.After installing it in my new motherboard (Asrock z97 Fatal1ty) and 8 GB of ram (I know, not much but enough to make it run), i got windows 7 ultimate installed and everything seemed to work well. I should mention that I used the stock cooler that came with the processor (which are usually known to not be great, but usually they work well enough). At one point, I decided to head into the bios and make sure everything checked out correctly. That's when I noticed the processor temp. It was idling at around 40-45 C!!! I thought that it seemed a little strange and I wanted to try pushing the processors and see where the temperatures would level off at.So I downloaded a tool called Core Temp to monitor the processor temps from within windows. Then I downloaded Prime 95 and tried running a stress test to see where the temps would go. Immediately after starting the test, the temps jumped to 75C (within a second or two) and after about 4 seconds I was getting warnings about the CPU temp reaching dangerous levels. I quickly stopped the stress test.This got me thinking, I wonder if I didn't seat the heat sink down properly. After checking the heat sink I decided it was down completely and I turned the computer on again, only to see the same extremely high temps. At that point, I decided to remove the heat sink, clean off the stock thermal compound and apply arctic silver 5. After re-installing everything and turning the computer on, the temps seemed about 10 degrees cooler all around. Unfortunately, about 10 seconds in to the Prime 95 stress test, the temps jump up to 80 + degrees. Still too hot for my comfort. I've read quite a few reviewers that said they overclocked to 4.5 and 4.6 GHz on just the stock cooler so I'm not sure why mine is running so hot.Despite the processor running this hot I still gave it 4 out of 5 starts for the value at the given price point. Stock coolers tend to be okay at best and perhaps my processor just runs a little hotter than most (or maybe all the 4790Ks run hotter) but this is a problem that is easily fixed by buying an aftermarket air cooler. I've ordered the Cooler Master 212 EVO which is a beast compared to the stock cooler. I have no doubt that installing it will drop my temps down at least 20 degrees under load (maybe more). It only cost about 30 bucks and I don't consider it a huge problem (hence only dropping 1 start off the processor).I just wanted to post some temps of my processors here for other people to see so they have something to compare their processor to. If yours is running hot like mine, try a different aftermarket cooler like the cooler master 212 EVO (or many others out there). If I remember, I'll try it out and come back to update my review with the temps from the new heat sink.One last note, my processor was made in Vietnam and the numbers on the processor are: SR219 X432A796. It was purchased in October of 2014 for any who are interested in which batches are being sold now.
2014-10-18
J****n
Beast of a processor, even with the new i7-5000 series out--this chip still holds it's own and is arguably faster even when not overclocked.
2014-10-18
T****.
The Sonic the Hedgehog of processors. It's fantastical! I have no complaints. Does what it's supposed to and flawlessly.
2014-10-18
Jo****es
reallyy really fast !
2014-10-18
C.****en
I did a fair amount of research before I bought this processor and I decided to go for it for several reasons. It was unlocked (meaning I can choose to overclock it if I want), a lot of people have overclocked it and had it run very stable even on air. I'm not an overclocker but I like buying overclocking processors because if they are meant to be overclocked and run stable, they should run very stable if you don't overclock it. It also has a very high clock speed which may me choose this over several other i7s and i5s. For not much more money, you can get this beast.
After installing it in my new motherboard (Asrock z97 Fatal1ty) and 8 GB of ram (I know, not much but enough to make it run), i got windows 7 ultimate installed and everything seemed to work well. I should mention that I used the stock cooler that came with the processor (which are usually known to not be great, but usually they work well enough). At one point, I decided to head into the bios and make sure everything checked out correctly. That's when I noticed the processor temp. It was idling at around 40-45 C!!! I thought that it seemed a little strange and I wanted to try pushing the processors and see where the temperatures would level off at.
So I downloaded a tool called Core Temp to monitor the processor temps from within windows. Then I downloaded Prime 95 and tried running a stress test to see where the temps would go. Immediately after starting the test, the temps jumped to 75C (within a second or two) and after about 4 seconds I was getting warnings about the CPU temp reaching dangerous levels. I quickly stopped the stress test.
This got me thinking, I wonder if I didn't seat the heat sink down properly. After checking the heat sink I decided it was down completely and I turned the computer on again, only to see the same extremely high temps. At that point, I decided to remove the heat sink, clean off the stock thermal compound and apply arctic silver 5. After re-installing everything and turning the computer on, the temps seemed about 10 degrees cooler all around. Unfortunately, about 10 seconds in to the Prime 95 stress test, the temps jump up to 80 + degrees. Still too hot for my comfort. I've read quite a few reviewers that said they overclocked to 4.5 and 4.6 GHz on just the stock cooler so I'm not sure why mine is running so hot.
Despite the processor running this hot I still gave it 4 out of 5 starts for the value at the given price point. Stock coolers tend to be okay at best and perhaps my processor just runs a little hotter than most (or maybe all the 4790Ks run hotter) but this is a problem that is easily fixed by buying an aftermarket air cooler. I've ordered the Cooler Master 212 EVO which is a beast compared to the stock cooler. I have no doubt that installing it will drop my temps down at least 20 degrees under load (maybe more). It only cost about 30 bucks and I don't consider it a huge problem (hence only dropping 1 start off the processor).
I just wanted to post some temps of my processors here for other people to see so they have something to compare their processor to. If yours is running hot like mine, try a different aftermarket cooler like the cooler master 212 EVO (or many others out there). If I remember, I'll try it out and come back to update my review with the temps from the new heat sink.
One last note, my processor was made in Vietnam and the numbers on the processor are: SR219 X432A796. It was purchased in October of 2014 for any who are interested in which batches are being sold now.
2014-10-15
R****o
This is first i7 I have ever owned. And man its faster than anything I have ever owned. I was choosing between the i5 4690k or this i7 4790k and my uses were for Gaming and Video/Music editing and to be honest I think I would of been disappointed with the i5 cause this i7 can handle so many programs at once its ridiculous at most I run 8 major programs and it does not stutter or slowdown. Also I do wish I got more memory for it cause I only got 2 8gb and I do fill all 8gb with those programs so that's the only thing holding mine back. Also temps for me are pretty dang low I have a h105 water cooler and the temps stay at 27c to 29c at idel and max load 66 to 68c and that's when my room is cold in the morning. When I have my room at 88f it idels at 33c and max load stays the same so I think its really good especially in my situation that I don't have central ac or any form of ac for that matter. Any ways If you choose this CPU you wont regret it and it will last a very long time.
2014-10-15
ma****dt
Works great. I do a lot of video editing and rendering with no problems.
2014-10-15
C****s
I am so glad that I purchased this CPU. The first one was not delivered correctly. Amazon was awesome and sent out another package. Installed the CPU on the board that I purchased as well, and i am very satisfied with this CPU. Recommend this to anyone!
2014-10-14
ma****dt
Works great. I do a lot of video editing and rendering with no problems.
2014-10-14
Ch****ss
I am so glad that I purchased this CPU. The first one was not delivered correctly. Amazon was awesome and sent out another package. Installed the CPU on the board that I purchased as well, and i am very satisfied with this CPU. Recommend this to anyone!
2014-10-14
R****o
This is first i7 I have ever owned. And man its faster than anything I have ever owned. I was choosing between the i5 4690k or this i7 4790k and my uses were for Gaming and Video/Music editing and to be honest I think I would of been disappointed with the i5 cause this i7 can handle so many programs at once its ridiculous at most I run 8 major programs and it does not stutter or slowdown. Also I do wish I got more memory for it cause I only got 2 8gb and I do fill all 8gb with those programs so that's the only thing holding mine back. Also temps for me are pretty dang low I have a h105 water cooler and the temps stay at 27c to 29c at idel and max load 66 to 68c and that's when my room is cold in the morning. When I have my room at 88f it idels at 33c and max load stays the same so I think its really good especially in my situation that I don't have central ac or any form of ac for that matter. Any ways If you choose this CPU you wont regret it and it will last a very long time.
2014-10-14
A****k
OC mine to 4.7 ghzsuperfast processingI need 1.36 volts to get 47x multiplier and 100 bclk but if I downclock it to 4.65 ghz (46x multiplier and 101 bclk I can keep voltage around 1.31 --The thing is, I paid intel $25 extra for overclocking insurance so if I burn out my CPU by applying too much voltage OCing I am covered under warranty. So i feel perfectly fine pusing it to the limit. I am stable on prime 95 (dont use 28, use prime ver 26.? because it works better with Haswell--the newest prime is bad for haswell, causing temps to rise too much with even minor OC). Google which version is the exact one to use, it slips my mind at this moment.Of course, throw out the stock heat sink when it arrives. I am using a corsair h100i and it works magic. If your case cant handle it then use the h80i.
2014-10-13
A****k
OC mine to 4.7 ghz
superfast processing
I need 1.36 volts to get 47x multiplier and 100 bclk but if I downclock it to 4.65 ghz (46x multiplier and 101 bclk I can keep voltage around 1.31 --The thing is, I paid intel $25 extra for overclocking insurance so if I burn out my CPU by applying too much voltage OCing I am covered under warranty. So i feel perfectly fine pusing it to the limit. I am stable on prime 95 (dont use 28, use prime ver 26.? because it works better with Haswell--the newest prime is bad for haswell, causing temps to rise too much with even minor OC). Google which version is the exact one to use, it slips my mind at this moment.
Of course, throw out the stock heat sink when it arrives. I am using a corsair h100i and it works magic. If your case cant handle it then use the h80i.
135299
After installing it in my new motherboard (Asrock z97 Fatal1ty) and 8 GB of ram (I know, not much but enough to make it run), i got windows 7 ultimate installed and everything seemed to work well. I should mention that I used the stock cooler that came with the processor (which are usually known to not be great, but usually they work well enough). At one point, I decided to head into the bios and make sure everything checked out correctly. That's when I noticed the processor temp. It was idling at around 40-45 C!!! I thought that it seemed a little strange and I wanted to try pushing the processors and see where the temperatures would level off at.
So I downloaded a tool called Core Temp to monitor the processor temps from within windows. Then I downloaded Prime 95 and tried running a stress test to see where the temps would go. Immediately after starting the test, the temps jumped to 75C (within a second or two) and after about 4 seconds I was getting warnings about the CPU temp reaching dangerous levels. I quickly stopped the stress test.
This got me thinking, I wonder if I didn't seat the heat sink down properly. After checking the heat sink I decided it was down completely and I turned the computer on again, only to see the same extremely high temps. At that point, I decided to remove the heat sink, clean off the stock thermal compound and apply arctic silver 5. After re-installing everything and turning the computer on, the temps seemed about 10 degrees cooler all around. Unfortunately, about 10 seconds in to the Prime 95 stress test, the temps jump up to 80 + degrees. Still too hot for my comfort. I've read quite a few reviewers that said they overclocked to 4.5 and 4.6 GHz on just the stock cooler so I'm not sure why mine is running so hot.
Despite the processor running this hot I still gave it 4 out of 5 starts for the value at the given price point. Stock coolers tend to be okay at best and perhaps my processor just runs a little hotter than most (or maybe all the 4790Ks run hotter) but this is a problem that is easily fixed by buying an aftermarket air cooler. I've ordered the Cooler Master 212 EVO which is a beast compared to the stock cooler. I have no doubt that installing it will drop my temps down at least 20 degrees under load (maybe more). It only cost about 30 bucks and I don't consider it a huge problem (hence only dropping 1 start off the processor).
I just wanted to post some temps of my processors here for other people to see so they have something to compare their processor to. If yours is running hot like mine, try a different aftermarket cooler like the cooler master 212 EVO (or many others out there). If I remember, I'll try it out and come back to update my review with the temps from the new heat sink.
One last note, my processor was made in Vietnam and the numbers on the processor are: SR219 X432A796. It was purchased in October of 2014 for any who are interested in which batches are being sold now.
superfast processing
I need 1.36 volts to get 47x multiplier and 100 bclk but if I downclock it to 4.65 ghz (46x multiplier and 101 bclk I can keep voltage around 1.31 --The thing is, I paid intel $25 extra for overclocking insurance so if I burn out my CPU by applying too much voltage OCing I am covered under warranty. So i feel perfectly fine pusing it to the limit. I am stable on prime 95 (dont use 28, use prime ver 26.? because it works better with Haswell--the newest prime is bad for haswell, causing temps to rise too much with even minor OC). Google which version is the exact one to use, it slips my mind at this moment.
Of course, throw out the stock heat sink when it arrives. I am using a corsair h100i and it works magic. If your case cant handle it then use the h80i.