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Intel Core i7-2700K Quad-Core Processor 3.5 GHz 8 MB Cache LGA 1155 - BX80623I72700K

  • Based on 105 reviews
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Availability: In Stock.
Fulfilled by OEM XS INC.

Arrives May 3 – May 8
Order within 15 hours and 45 minutes
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Features

  • Process Type: Intel Core i7 Processor i7-2700K
  • Frequency: 3.5 GHz
  • Max Turbo Frequency: 3.9 GHz
  • Intel Smart Cache: 8 MB
  • Socket: LGA 1155

Description

Intel Core i7 Processor i7-2700K 3.5GHz 8MB LGA1155 CPU, Retail


Product Dimensions: 4 x 5 x 5 inches


Item Weight: 9.6 ounces


Item model number: BX80623I72700K


Is Discontinued By Manufacturer: No


Date First Available: October 11, 2011


Manufacturer: Intel


Language: English


Frequently asked questions

If you place your order now, the estimated arrival date for this product is: May 3 – May 8

Yes, absolutely! You may return this product for a full refund within 30 days of receiving it.

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Top Amazon Reviews


  • Intel Core i7 2700k review
The 2700-series is an essential part of a professional photographer's workflow pipeline. The i5(2500) is just fine and can perform real time editing in Photoshop and Lightroom. Don't pay more if you're already in real time which is basically anything that is just 2 or 3-dimensional and timeless: pictures, business cards, logos. However, the i7(2700) has hyper-treading and is better suited when working with heavy 4-dimensional projects with the 4th dimension being time as in HD video editing and commercial database recordings. In such a heavy scenario, the CPU could be working 100% for hours if not 24/7 and that is where we separate the 2700 from the 2700K, they have the same performance but the 2700K has more tolerance for extreme drawn out loads. That is why you'll find the 2700K in Hollywood workstations like Apple Towers and HP Z-series rendering scenes for the next featured movie where just a few seconds of a movie takes days if not weeks to render. Wait you say... Apple Towers and HP Z-series workstations use Xeon cpu's not 2700K. Right and wrong. 2700's are actually handicapped Xeons. When Intel makes a cpu by etching billions of transistors onto a silicon wafer its inevitable that some are great CPU's and some junk CPU's. They get sorted out unto different bins. The most perfect CPU's are put in the Xeon bin and are shipped to companies who make computers for mission-critical businesses such as banks, government agencies, Hollywood, etc. Most of the real estate in a CPU is dedicated to cache so lots of transistor faults are in the cache area. While a fault in a core part of a CPU requires the entire CPU be scrapped, Intel can still sell a CPU with a fault in the cache part by disabling it. In an over generalized way, that is 1/2 of how we get the different cpu bins: Xeon, i7, i5, and i3. The more cache that has to be disabled, the lower it has to be binned because each CPU core needs a certain amount of cache. The other 1/2 and the saving grace to a CPU that would otherwise be binned down is if it has great tolerance to heat/electricity. The better formed a CPU's transistors, the higher electrical frequency it can tolerate. Although it is rare, a CPU can become a Xeon just by having great tolerance. That's why you'll sometimes see Xeons with only 2cores and 3MB of cache. This brings us back to the 2700K. The 2700 is an i7 meaning that 100% of its cache (8MB) formed properly compared to 80% in an i5 (6MB). The i7 also has greater tolerance, its core and graphics clock can reliably cycle 100MHz and 250MHz higher then an i5 respectively. Additionally, the K designation in the 2700K means it is capable of even higher tolerance. This doesn't mean it'll performs faster, it just means its more likely to maintain a 100% 24/7 load. That's why most will never see this gain as most don't need a CPU that can handle a 100% 24/7 load. Cons: Why bother getting a Xeon when 2700K is the bee's knees? Easy, Intel disabled ECC memory. When electronic ones and zeroes fly in and out of your CPU to RAM, it's proven that radiation from everyday things like the sun or kitchen microwave sometimes flip these values from one to zero and from zero to one. 99.99% of the time this is harmless and ignored. However, as you scale up your computer with more memory, more video cards, and more complex computational loads running 24/7, the more chance of those errors going from just giving out wrong computations to being critical to the point of a crash. ECC memory won't totally prevent that scenario but makes it more unlikely. That is why all Mac Towers and HP Z-series workstations use ECC exclusively. In short, Xeon is the most reliable way to go and dare I say 2700K's are actually surplus repacked Xeons that may handicapped from working with high-end workstations but it still maintain its tolerance and cache prowess. Best of all, with the 2700K Intel targeted the consumer's wallet instead of corporate/Hollywood's wallet. Thanks for reading. GUIDENG-The Picture Co. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on July 8, 2012 by Eric Guideng

  • top of the line i7
UPDATE FEBRUARY 2013- After a year or so with this system and cpu, with multiple bios settings overclocking and even underclocking, this cpu is a true performer. I have even tried out the new ivybridge equivalent(3770) and I have had more consistency with this chipset than with the ivyvbridge. I have tried several high level games and programs on both chipsets on both Linux and Windows work with great success. Never any problems from this chip. Only problems I have ever had was with the patriot wilfire ssd's I have and those have been rectified. Really recommend this chip. __________________________________________________________________________________ Being the latest update sandy-bridge chipset. this is the closest it gets to the big brother 980x and 990x. although those are slightly in a different league with 2 more cores. on benchmarks for games and day to day applications this 2700k squeezes in where the 2600k doesn't always. certainly looks nice on charts against the newest release sandybridge-E i7 my god is that thing nice. but forget about all the benchmark hoohaa. for a 50 dollar premium over the younger brother 2600k i cant say forsure or argue whether it's worth it or not, being simply that this is my first sandy-bridge, it is masterfully fast though. Tasty i might add. i have this sitting in a gigabyte z68-UD4 mobo sucking juice from a 500watt PSU and the run times i have done so far are impressive and up to standards. i see a bright future with this chip. i also have a mighty set of ram, 16 gigs(4x4) of DDR3 running at 1866mhz right out the box , nothing is overclocked. bios is set to x64 bit plus some other basic tweaks to run my linux ubuntu 11.10...no im not paying a premium for a windows or mac OS which i'm not to pleased with as of now. so with that my system boots properly every time thus far. no problems. i tend not to shut my system off, i put it to sleep every night on the weekdays, this system is at my work so. on the weekends when im not in i shut it off. boot times have always been under 20seconds. wake up time is about 3-6 seconds plus password input. a feature i might add about linux is the system monitor is way better than windows or Mac. it shows all my cores percentage speed. which i like. also in terminal i can run a check on my system features. i haven't tried any heavy gaming or video editing yet. i do not have my whole system set up. system update - 12/18/2011 . new 60gb sata III ssd for my OS and plug-ins..HUGE DIFFERENCE.. boot times are falling in the 10 second range. still haven't pushed this chip hard yet. except for a stupid test of crysis on my cheap temporary gpu. what a mistake. so with that like another reviewer stated if you're new to the line like me. i recommend getting the fastest out. why not? if your not big on computers yet. i would check out a couple helpful sites. tomshardware , anandtech , tigerdirect , overclockers.net? (Google it), NCIX on youtube , from there keep on searching. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on December 7, 2011 by MaysEffect

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