Testseek.com have collected 135 expert reviews of the Intel Core i7 5775C 3.7GHz Socket 1150 and the average rating is 78%. Scroll down and see all reviews for Intel Core i7 5775C 3.7GHz Socket 1150.
September 2015
(78%)
135 Reviews
Average score from experts who have reviewed this product.
Users
(92%)
18 Reviews
Average score from owners of the product.
780100135
The editors liked
Intel Iris Graphics
Good Temperatures
Low Power Consumption
1080p Gaming On Low settings With No Discrete GPU
L4 Cache
14nm
Excellent Power to Performance Ratio
Capable Overclocker
Iris Pro HD6200 IGP Handles Most General Tasks
Iris Pro 6200 Graphics
Decent Performance
Large eDRAM Cache
Best integrated graphics performance we've seen from any socketed CPU to date
Compatible with most existing Z97 motherboards (after a BIOS update)
Moderate 65-watt TDP
Tops the Core i7-4790K in some traditionally CPU-centric tests
Improved power
Good performance
Overclocks well
Z170 platform offers new features.
The editors didn't like
Very Short LifeSpan
Anything Greater than 1st or 2nd Generation Core should wait for "Skylake"
Power consumption was measured at the wall and temps monitored with Easy Tune. The system ran a full burn in benchmark for 30 minutes which is plenty of time given the warm ambient temps around here as of late.
Not As Fast As Higher-Clocked Intel Processors
Pricey
CPU performance doesn't break new ground overall
AMD APUs offer integrated graphics that are good enough for gaming
While costing hundreds less
Limited availability
Likely the result of 14nm node's immaturity. Unimpressive performance and poor overclocking potential. For raw power (sans integrated graphics)
Published: 2021-10-12, Author: Steven , review by: techspot.com
All the data we've gathered provides real insight into how AMD and Intel CPU architectures compared over the past decade for gaming. We've seen AMD come from nowhere to often beating Intel, while the latter has made smaller steps in pure architecture term...
Published: 2018-10-25, Author: Jeff , review by: Techreport.com
The Core i7-5775C holds up well enough in today's most CPU-intensive games with today's most powerful graphics card, but it's hardly the miracle worker its reputation might suggest. This chip's eDRAM may have allowed it to endure the passage of time bett...
Abstract: Its hard to believe considering we just finished up an Intel launch, but it is already time to check out Intel’s next launch. Kaby Lake was launched at the beginning of this year and the Mainstream lineup of CPUs is getting refreshed with Coffee Lake and Z370. This is the 8th generation of Intel’s Core processors going back to the original launch back in 2006...
Abstract: Its hard to believe considering we just finished up an Intel launch, but it is already time to check out Intel’s next launch. Kaby Lake was launched at the beginning of this year and the Mainstream lineup of CPUs is getting refreshed with Coffee Lake and Z370. This is the 8th generation of Intel’s Core processors going back to the original launch back in 2006...
So I think most people will admit that AMD has had a lot of wins this year with all of the Ryzen launches. As I found out in our 1700v7700K coverage the 7700K was still a great performing CPU, especially when looking at gaming performance. But with ju...
Abstract: Its hard to believe considering we just finished up an Intel launch, but it is already time to check out Intel’s next launch. Kaby Lake was launched at the beginning of this year and the Mainstream lineup of CPUs is getting refreshed with Coffee Lake and Z370. This is the 8th generation of Intel’s Core processors going back to the original launch back in 2006...
Well, the Ryzen 7 launch has a surprising amount of excitement and drama mixed together with the impressive numbers but with memory issues and game performance causing very polarized opinions on social media and on websites like Reddit. AMD fans even...
Abstract: This summer I wrote about some issues I had with the Core i7 5775C on Linux where under Ubuntu 15.04 the experience was unstable but this socketed Broadwell was running great on Fedora 22. Fortunately, the Ubuntu experience for the i7-5775C with Iris Grap...
Abstract: We tested the new high-end CPU from the fifth generation Core i processor family: the Core i7-5775C, which has four physical cores (more four logical cores thanks to the Hyper-Threading technology) running at 3.3 GHz with turbo clock up to 3.7 GHz, is man...
The Core i7-5775C is an odd duck, not only because it's the first Broadwell processor for the desktop. It's a specialty part that bizarrely melds together an unlocked CPU multiplier, a low 65W TDP, L4 cache, and a graphics chip that absolutely dominates a...