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Intel Core i9-9900K - Tray (LGA 1151, 3.60 GHz, 8 -Core)

Intel Core i9-9900K - Tray

LGA 1151, 3.60 GHz, 8 -Core


Questions about Intel Core i9-9900K - Tray

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0 questions and answers

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joelsigrist

6 years ago

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Anonymous

6 years ago • purchased this product

purchased this product
It always depends on your case and whether you want to overclock or not. Since the i9900K gets pretty hot, you can't go wrong with an AIO like NZXT Kraken x62 incl. AM4 (3cm) or Corsair H150i Pro. You can also use an air cooler without any problem https://www.digitec.ch/de... or be quiet! Pure Rock (15.50cm) There are others listed in the accessories for the i9
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JoelMoser

7 years ago

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Pred4tor

7 years ago • purchased this product

purchased this product
Ciao Joel Well, I have a Noctua CPU cooler NH-D15 mounted and it runs overclocked to 5 GHZ even in stress mode not hot (usually below 70 degrees C). However, this cooler needs a lot of space, I don't understand the question with the power supply? Nowadays you can get 850 Watt units for a good price and that is easily enough for normal systems with a GPU. I now have a Seasonic and am very satisfied, but I'm not a professional ;-)
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Super User DO

7 years ago

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Zarifar

7 years ago

Helpful answer
The tray variants can be described as "pallet goods"; these processors are bought by manufacturers such as Dell in order to install them in their finished systems. They therefore do not contain a cooler and sometimes also no manufacturer's warranty. The box variant usually comes with a cooler, as well as user manuals and warranty regulations. I would recommend the box variant.
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Key96

7 years ago

Intel itself does not offer the warranty for the tray, but digitec does. You can find the corresponding confirmation in the comments of the following post: https://www.digitec.ch/de... Go to the comment by "go2theG" (2nd comment) and read the answer by "Jan Heidenreich" (2nd sub-comment) below: "We also offer a 3-year warranty on the tray version."
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Anonymous

7 years ago

Helpful answer
The turbo mode depends on the number of actively used CPU cores. The line-up is as follows: 1-2 cores --> 5.0 GHz Turbo 4 cores --> 4.8 GHz Turbo 6-8 cores --> 4.7 GHz Turbo If you are running applications that use multiple cores, Turbo is activated on all cores, but the number of cores used simultaneously determines the effective frequency increase. If you run an application that uses a maximum of 2 cores, you should get 5.0 GHz, unless the CPU gets too hot, in which case the performance is limited accordingly.
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AngelIglesias

7 years ago

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Lammi

7 years ago

Helpful answer
you can't exchange it directly at intel if it's broken. but digitec has to fulfil the legal guarantee or warranty. so in principle it doesn't matter to you, you would have contacted digitec in case of a warranty claim anyway. what is omitted are any extended warranties granted on non-tray versions.

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