i7 7700K disappoints with poor TIM under IHS
If you were following news of the i7 7700K, you would have known the i7 7700K can hit rather high temperatures when it goes up to 5 GHz.Β However it seems like it could be a case of poor TIM under the IHS, resulting in suboptimal thermal transfer between the CPU die and the heatspreader. If the heat doesnβt get transferred to the IHS, then even the greatest cooling solutions will be rendered moot as they can only wick awayΒ heat from the heatspreaderβs surface.
RichUK, an AnandTech forum member, put his retail i7 7700K to the test. With the i7 7700K running at 5 GHz with 1.344V, cooled by a NZXT Kraken X62 running in silent mode,Β the i7 7700K hit maximum temperatures of an almost critical 96Β°C, but was otherwise stable in Prime95 v27.9 before delidding.
After the delid and replacement of the stock TIM under the IHS with Coollaboratory Liquid Ultra, maximum temperatures dropped by a whopping 30Β°C, which clearly shows the inadequacy of the stock solution. This is a retail unit too, not an engineering sample which may have certain issues yet to be ironed out.
Intel has been using TIMΒ under the IHS instead of solder since the Ivy Bridge generation, which has not seen much favor in the overclocking scene. This bit of news mightΒ cause enthusiasts who were looking to squeeze the most out of their Kaby Lake CPUs to abandon ship,Β especially when news of AMDβs Bristol Ridge APUs having solder between the die and IHSΒ has emerged, with the high probability that AMDβs Ryzen will follow suit.
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Pokdepinion: This bit of news is not really a surprise, as Intel has been doing this for quite some time, and drops in temperature has been observed every time. Letβs hope AMD gives them the necessary motivation to deliver a better solution.



AMD after delided also temperature 5901823123 Degree Celcius. At least this Intel one we have an option to delid it.
Wow, hotter than the sun. I guess some people must be heat proof then ;)