Testseek.com have collected 117 expert reviews of the Intel Core i7 7820X 4.30GHz Socket 1248 and the average rating is 82%. Scroll down and see all reviews for Intel Core i7 7820X 4.30GHz Socket 1248.
September 2017
(82%)
117 Reviews
Average score from experts who have reviewed this product.
Users
(87%)
934 Reviews
Average score from owners of the product.
820100117
The editors liked
Great multi-threaded performance
Sits in the sweet spot in the Core X-Series
Good overclocking performance
Current LGA2011v3 coolers will work on the new LGA2066 socket
Strong multithreaded performance
Workstation and productivity applications
Impressive performance in both single- and multi-core workloads
Least costly compatible motherboards are significantly less than for competing AMD Threadripper boards
Performance
Overclocking
Power consumption
SkylakeX topped our performance charts
Bringing a much better value over BroadwellE on the highend
The editors didn't like
Only 28 PCI-Express lanes
ThreadRipper 1920X offers much of the same plus full 64 PCIe lanes
Performance regression in some games and applications
Price
Power consumption
Thermal paste
AMD's Ryzen 7 1800X isn't that far behind
Considering the much cheaper chip and compatible boards
Threadripper offers many more PCIe lanes (if you need them)
Not soldered
It's extremely power hungry and considerably more expensive than Ryzen equivalents
Published: 2019-01-14, Author: Ian , review by: anandtech.com
Battling CPUs at $60 is going to be a tough call. Do you throw the best hardware around the chip that money can buy to compare the absolute limits of the hardware under ideal conditions, or do you keep it more reasonable for the price bracket it is intend...
Published: 2018-08-14, Author: Paul , review by: tomshardware.com
Abstract: It's one of the greatest questions of our time: AMD or Intel? Today, that rivalry has entered a new stage of Cinebench taunting as AMD's 2000-series Threadripper processors, commonly known as Threadripper 2, come to market to compete against Intel's Skyla...
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...
Impressive performance in both single- and multi-core workloads, Least costly compatible motherboards are significantly less than for competing AMD Threadripper boards
AMD's Ryzen 7 1800X isn't that far behind, considering the much cheaper chip and compatible boards, Threadripper offers many more PCIe lanes (if you need them)
Intel's eight-core Core X Series CPU is a fine performer for serious content creators or extreme multi-taskers. But if you can live with slightly less performance, the Ryzen 7 1800X (and its motherboards) are a much better value. Read More...
Great multi-threaded performance, Sits in the sweet spot in the Core X-Series, Good overclocking performance, Current LGA2011v3 coolers will work on the new LGA2066 socket
Only 28 PCI-Express lanes, ThreadRipper 1920X offers much of the same plus full 64 PCIe lanes
Intel's Core X-Series really has a chip for everyone, pricing starts at $242 and goes all the way up to $1999. This new high-end desktop (HEDT) lineup from Intel is sure different from what we've seen in the past, it is a big result of what AMD did with R...
Published: 2017-09-05, Author: Bruno , review by: reviewstudio.net
performance, overclocking, power consumption
not soldered
Intel LGA2066 platform brought new generations of CPUs, ranging from 4 to 18 cores. Today I've tested the Skylake-X 8-core SKU- i7-7820X – and Kabylake-X flagship – i7-7740X (4-core).The CPUs are good, especially in overclocking where 5GHz is not a proble...
Abstract: We still don't know how Intel's highest core-count Skylake-X processors will perform, but here's an eight-core appetizer to nibble on in the meantime.The Intel Core i7-7820X is, at least architecturally, closer to the Core i9-7900X than to the Kaby Lake-X...