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Sandy Bridge-E CPUs Too Hot For Intel?

MrSeb writes "Intel's next consumer CPUs — the Sandy Bridge-E — will ship without a heatsink and fan. These new chips, which will feature up to 15MB of L3 cache and integrated four-channel DDR3 and 32x PCI 3.0 controllers will run very hot — potentially up to 180W TDP. Is Intel unable to cool these extreme chips, or is there another reason for the shift? Curiously, Intel will still offer 'sold separately' own-brand cooling solutions for the new chips — so is this merely Intel trying to cut costs for enthusiasts who don't need a stock cooler — or is this the beginnings of Intel branching out into the cooling business?"

6 of 244 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Taco, could you explain this by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Informative

    Intel will offer Intel-branded cooling solutions for the new chips, they just won't package them with the chips.

  2. Re:Warranty by moonbender · · Score: 4, Informative

    Huh? Installation error also applies to the "boxed" coolers. It's not like they sold them already mounted on the mainboard. However, damaging a CPU when installing the HSF has been fairly rare for a while now, since the advent of improved mounting mechanisms, integrated heat spreaders and CPUs with thermal throttles.

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  3. Re:Stock coolers are a waste anyway by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

    I'm an enthusiast. I build with stock coolers if they're available at the same price(and frequently they are). No particular reason other than they work. I don't overclock, though. Going from 100 to 105fps or slightly dropping the time it takes to encode something doesn't really interest me.

  4. Re:Warranty by Lehk228 · · Score: 3, Informative

    or just buy an AMD, you can still buy them with pretty nice OEM coolers and i have never in my live had an AMD CPU go tits up on me, even when i did fuck up the fan install and had heat alarm events and shutdowns, never damaged anything.

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  5. Re:Taco, could you explain this by iamhassi · · Score: 5, Informative

    Intel will offer Intel-branded cooling solutions for the new chips, they just won't package them with the chips.

    ^----- This has been confirmed: "Intel has decided to offer own brand coolers for the platform, it's just that they won't come in the box with the CPU."

    So Intel will offer coolers, they're just sold separately, probably because these are cpus designed for enthusiast ("The E range (which stands for ‘enthusiast’") so they're meant for people that overclock and buy separate coolers rather than use the "stock" cooler that comes with the cpu.

    Pricing of the CPUs has also been released:
    _name__core__threads__freq__turbo freq__L3__TDP__price_
    Core i7-3820 4 8 3.6 GHz 3.9 GHz 10 MB 130 Watt $294
    Core i7-3930K 6 12 3.2 GHz 3.8 GHz 12 MB 130 Watt $583
    Core i7-3960X 6 12 3.3 GHz 3.9 GHz 15 MB 130 Watt $999

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  6. So Whatcher Wanna Do... by Greyfox · · Score: 3, Informative

    Is get yerself a big potroast see? Now yew wanna make yereslf a dry rub with some cumin and... Ok... 'ere's my secret ingredient, don't tell anyone... dark cocoa powder. Salt that potroast and rub it with yer dry rub! Now yew wanna wrap that fucker up with some tinfoil, an' go ahead and chuck some raisins and a bit o' tomato sauce in there! Wrap it good now, don't wanna leak that all over the place! Now park that fucker in yew computer and fire up counterstrike fer about 6 hours! Shoot some goddamn hippies yeehaw! After 6 hours yer roast she oughta' be fork tender and just fallin' apart! Nothing better than shooting hippies and computer-cooked potroast nosireee!

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