Testseek.com have collected 78 expert reviews of the Intel Core i7 3820 3.6GHz Socket 2011 and the average rating is 81%. Scroll down and see all reviews for Intel Core i7 3820 3.6GHz Socket 2011.
January 2012
(81%)
78 Reviews
Average score from experts who have reviewed this product.
Abstract: Just a week ago, Intel officially launched its Core i7-3820 Sandy Bridge-E processor, the processor is the first quad-core model in LGA2011 platform, and it’s priced as low as US$294. We have got the CPU and did a small test. As its specs and pricing ...
Feature Tradeoff with 2600K Processor, Gold, Discuss this review in our forums
I have always been a system upgrader. This meant that I take part prices into consideration more than a "total" system price. I usually transfer old parts over to the new system as they are still up to date. This means that when I do an overhaul, it us...
Solid performance, on par with the similarly priced Core i72600K. The X79 platform supports more RAM and PCI Express 3.0 along with more PCIe lanes
The X79 platform has a high entry price with limited benefit to users. Higher memory latency than LGA1155 processors
For $285, the Core i7-3820 is a worthwhile entry as it repeatedly exceeded the Core i7-2600K's performance output. The new SB-E chip looked particularly favorable in our encoding benchmarks, while its showing was satisfactory in the application tests,...
Abstract: The new LGA 2011 platform for enthusiasts didn’t really impress us that much at launch. Of course, it was not worse than the previous LGA 1366 and LGA 1155 platforms, but it still couldn’t be called a real break-through revolutionary product, to be hon...
High power consumption when overclocked, No QuickSync, Not faster than 2700K
Although it has a number of technical advantages (more cache, more / faster PCIe lanes, newer platform, etc.), the Core i7-3820 performs almost identically to the Core i7-2700K, at least with the applications we used for testing. This is to be expected co...
Those debating between the Core i7-3820 and the Core i7-2700K then have to decide if the added memory support and additional PCIe bandwidth are worth the added cost. If you are a heavy multi-GPU user then that might be the case, otherwise we are kind of...
I see three reasons why you'd want the Core i7 3820:1. You need PCIe 3.0 today and/or you need more PCIe lanes than a Core i7 2600K can provide,2. You need tons of memory bandwidth for a particular application,3. You want a 2600K but you need a platform t...
Abstract: Let's show the basic specs of all Core i7 processors released to date in a series of quick-reference tables. The Core i7 was the first Intel processor to bring an integrated memory controller, feature available on AMD processors since the Athlon 64. In...
No improvement over 2700K, Still pricey as a whole platform
So the Intel Core i7 3820 performs at around the same sort of levels as the top-end standard Sandy Bridge CPUs. We have to say, that's a bit of a disappointment. This is supposed to be the serious enthusiast processors for Intel's desktop faithful, but th...