Our motherboard set the Core i7-7700K to 1.30V at its 4.50 GHz max turbo, whereupon it behaved exactly the way we’d expect our Core i7-6700K to act when overclocked to 4.50 GHz at 1.30V. Intel didn’t change the core micro architecture between Skylake and Kaby Lake, and our motherboard didn’t even read a voltage reduction for the Core i7-7700K, compared to the Core i7-6700K. We’re also told that process improvements will enhance efficiency, but there is no free lunch. We can’t say much about the revised Intel HD Graphics 630 without access to Intel documentation, which should be forthcoming when the company provides its usual information exchange closer to launch time and none of our programs can pick out any pertinent information. It’s because we’ve seen the Core i7-7700K and Core i5-7600K in action that we can provide that data for those two processors, and the asterisks in the chart indicate guesses derived from Intel’s previous models. What the company didn’t mention was the graphics version or Intel Turbo Boost frequencies. Intel accidentally leaked a little information about its desktop Kaby Lake CPUs in a document concerning other variations of the processor.
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