tarifa Posted July 17, 2020 Share Posted July 17, 2020 How dificult is .... it to socket a intel core i7 10700 8x2,00 GHz, tray socel 1200 LGA on a mainboard. Quote Intel® Core™ i7-10700 Prozessor (Codename "Comet Lake-S") 8-Kern-CPU für den Sockel 1200 und basiert auf der Comet Lake Generation. Die CPU taktet mit 2,90 GHz bei maximal 65 Watt TDP. Dieser Intel® Core™-Prozessor basiert auf Intel®'s 14-nm-Comet Lake-Architektur und stellt eine Weiterentwicklung der bisherigen Core™-Prozessoren dar. https://www.alternate.de/Intel/Core-i7-10700-Prozessor/html/product/1612095 Quote Typ Desktop Hersteller-Nr. CM8070104282327 CPU-Typ Core i7 Sockel 1200 Bauform FC-LGA4 Kern Bezeichnung Core i7 10xxx (Comet Lake-S) Anzahl 8 Kerne Threads 16 Mikroarchitektur Comet Lake Strukturgröße 14 nm Taktfrequenz 2900 MHz Turbo-Modus bis maximal 4800 MHz Cache Level 3: 16384 KB Lüfter Kein Lüfter im Lieferumfang enthalten CPUs in Multiprozessorsystem 1 Speicher-Controller Kanäle 2 Unterstützte Standards DDR4-2933 Grafik GPU Intel® UHD Graphics 630 Takt Standard: 350 MHz, Turbo: 1200 MHz Bustakt 8000 MT/S Stromverbrauch (TDP) maximal 65 Watt Hinweis Tray-Version Feature Intel® Optane™ Speicher unterstützt, Intel® Turbo Boost Max-Technik 3.0, Intel® Turbo-Boost-Technik 2.0, Intel® Hyper-Threading-Technik, Intel® Virtualisierungstechnik (VT-x), Intel® Directed-I/O-Virtualisierungstechnik (VT-d), Intel® VT-x mit Extended Page Tables (EPT), Intel® 64, Befehlssatz 64-bit, Intel® SSE4.1, Intel® SSE4.2, Intel® AVX2, Ruhezustände, Erweiterte Intel SpeedStep® Technologie, Thermal-Monitoring-Technik, Intel® Identity-Protection-Technik, Intel® AES New Instructions, Secure Key, Intel® Software Guard Extensions (Intel® SGX), Intel® OS Guard, Execute Disable Bit, Intel® Boot Guard Weitere Informationen Max. Speichergröße (abhängig vom Speichertyp): 128 GB see also here : https://www.alternate.de/Intel/Core-i7-10700-Prozessor/html/product/1612095 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Mindovermaster Moderator Posted July 17, 2020 Moderator Share Posted July 17, 2020 Um, what are you asking here? Does your board support it? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
neufuse Veteran Posted July 17, 2020 Veteran Share Posted July 17, 2020 (edited) how hard? you just line up the triangle corners... sit it in and close the retainer........ it aint a threadripper with 10 steps and specific torque screws... Jim K 1 Share Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Jim K Global Moderator Posted July 17, 2020 Global Moderator Share Posted July 17, 2020 Inserting an i7-10700 into any compatible LGA1200 board is very easy ... the process has been relatively unchanged for over a decade (since what...LGA 775?). Inserting an i7-10700 into an incompatible socket, such as the LGA1151, would be very difficult. 🙂 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Mindovermaster Moderator Posted July 17, 2020 Moderator Share Posted July 17, 2020 3 hours ago, neufuse said: it aint a threadripper with 10 steps and specific torque screws... I saw Linus from LTT install a lot of ThreadRippers, and it really isn't that different... Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Jim K Global Moderator Posted July 17, 2020 Global Moderator Share Posted July 17, 2020 49 minutes ago, Mindovermaster said: I saw Linus from LTT install a lot of ThreadRippers, and it really isn't that different ... But it _is_ different. Last I checked you didn't have to slide an Intel CPU onto a plastic bracket and then go in a specific order with a torque torx screwdriver. The only thing similar is that both TR and Intel is they're LGA. Different doesn't necessarily mean it is harder ... but they are very different. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
neufuse Veteran Posted July 17, 2020 Veteran Share Posted July 17, 2020 53 minutes ago, Mindovermaster said: I saw Linus from LTT install a lot of ThreadRippers, and it really isn't that different... isn't that different? TR CPU's are in plastic carriers, you have to make sure its in the carrier right if it came out... you have to move two brackets, one retainer and one clip down... place the TR CPU into the retainer, push it down, push the clip down part down, put screws in a specific order and torque them using a special torque driver the CPU comes with vs Intel Release level, pop up retainer, align cpu put down close retainer put clip down lever back down Steven P. and Jim K 2 Share Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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