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I have a passively cooled i5-8400 which runs at about 34-40 degrees for most of the day (peaking at about 60 degrees periodically) using a Cooler Master Hyper heat sink and a single 20cm Noctura case fan that runs at minimum (noiseless) speed until it needs to shift some warm air out of the case.

The applications I use would benefit from a hyper-threading boost and rather than upgrade everything I'm thinking of swapping out the cpu for an i7-8700

Whilst they are both 65W TDP, I am aware that hyperthreading, and the extra clock speed, can increase temps, but I cannot find any concrete figures of expected temp increases in a like-for-like environment.

Has anyone gone through a similar process and can tell me what they observed?

Here is a typical day for my i5-8400 system:

enter image description here

Thanks

CaldeiraG
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Kram
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2 Answers2

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The CPU-World article Intel Core i5-8400 vs i7-8700 gives both CPUs identical thermal properties.

Both CPUs are rated for the maximum of 100°C (Digital Thermal Sensor), from which you are very far with a maximal running temperature of only 60°.

It should be noted that the two CPUs are almost identical, as the i5 is only an i7 that didn't make the mark on performance. Temperature is directly related to power consumption, which is identical for both.

I don't think that you will see a big difference between the two processors as regarding the temperature.

harrymc
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I took the plunge and got a used i7-8700 off eBay...

For me at least, the temp differences are very little - in fact, if anything it's running a tiny bit cooler! - but that could be down to a number of factors beyond the CPU itself.

However increased clock speeds and hyperthreading do seem to have given me enough of a boost to be worth while - glad to be getting a little more more life out of my system before a bigger upgrade in the future.

enter image description here

Kram
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