i5-3570K vs i5-8600K - Need For Speed: Payback GTX 1650 Max-Q - משחק ביצועים Benchmarks


i5-3570K i5-8600K

Multi-Thread Performance

7170 Pts
12811 Pts

Single-Thread Performance

2028 Pts
2520 Pts

Need For Speed: Payback

i5-3570K לעומת i5-8600K ב- Need For Speed: Payback באמצעות GTX 1650 Max-Q - השוואת ביצועים של ביצועים ב- Ultra, High, בינונית ואיכות נמוכה עם רזולוציות של 1080p, 1440p, Ultrawide, 4K

i5-3570K i5-8600K

אולטרה איכות
רזולוציה מסגרות לשניה
1080p
33.3 FPS
1080p
42.8 FPS
1440p
23.9 FPS
1440p
30.7 FPS
2160p
16.4 FPS
2160p
21.0 FPS
w1440p
21.6 FPS
w1440p
27.7 FPS
איכות גבוהה
רזולוציה מסגרות לשניה
1080p
61.6 FPS
1080p
76.5 FPS
1440p
46.2 FPS
1440p
57.4 FPS
2160p
33.3 FPS
2160p
41.3 FPS
w1440p
42.3 FPS
w1440p
52.5 FPS
איכות בינונית
רזולוציה מסגרות לשניה
1080p
89.9 FPS
1080p
110.2 FPS
1440p
68.5 FPS
1440p
84.2 FPS
2160p
50.1 FPS
2160p
61.6 FPS
w1440p
63.0 FPS
w1440p
77.4 FPS
איכות נמוכה
רזולוציה מסגרות לשניה
1080p
146.6 FPS
1080p
177.7 FPS
1440p
113.1 FPS
1440p
137.6 FPS
2160p
83.8 FPS
2160p
102.1 FPS
w1440p
104.4 FPS
w1440p
127.0 FPS
i5-3570K
    i5-8600K

      Compare i5-3570K vs i5-8600K specifications

      Compare i5-3570K vs i5-8600K in more games


      דיון והערות

      שתף את ההערות שלך
      K
      kosherfinnegan 12 years ago
      FX 8350 vs i5 3570k futureproofingAs the title describes, I'm having a bit of trouble deciding between the fx8350 vs i5 3570k. For the most part, benchmarking shows that i5 beats fx in terms of overall gaming performance and fx beats i5 in video-based stuff and multitasking.As a normal consumer, I doubt I'll see a huge difference depending on which of the two I get since I doubt I'll be gaming/multitasking enough to "max" out each cpu. For the most part I'll probably be running programs and number crunching, streaming/watching videos, and doing some gaming. I think if I had to prioritize, gaming would come a close second to work/functionality.What I'm wondering is which of the two would be a better pick for down-the-line? From what I've researched, it seems like the current Intel chips generation is coming to an end, with certain sockets and stuff being discontinued in favor of something else to support the new generation (after Haswell that is). Also, the fx 8core design seems to be more popular with current ps4 console games that implement 8core hyperthreading. In deciding for a chip for long term use/function, would the fx 8350 be a better choice i5 3570k then? Since currently there's seems to be little difference between the two unless you're extremely concerned with maxing out the processors.
      0 0
      P
      peltdetrital 12 years ago
      syrup - well you won't have to replace anything unless you feel it starts to get slow (which for work on an i5 is virtually never). In the past people upgraded every year because +20-30% gains were made in a year. These days, gains have dropped to just 5-10% and since computers don't subjectively feel faster until about 20-30% speed increases are involved (I mean how a computer "feels" rather than benchmark statistics), people are naturally upgrading less often. If it runs all your games fine in 3-4 years, no reason why you can't make it last longer. Anything over 2.5-3 years though generally involves a motherboard replacement. That's why unless you upgrade almost every generation, it's impossible to plan for the future. You don't save money as it's no more expensive to buy 1x motherboard & CPU every 2-3 years than 1x CPU per year + 1x motherboard every 2 years and reuse the motherboard between every other CPU for just 10% difference.As for overclocking lifespan, Intel's use such little power anyway that overclocking won't necessarily reduce your PSU's lifespan at all, as unless you're running multiple graphics cards, even fully loaded they typically suck less than 50% of a 400w PSU's rated output. And there's no rule that says any future overclocks must be extreme involving +4.6GHz clocks & high voltages - nearly all 3570's can do 4.0-4.2GHz on stock voltage (it's the extra high voltages over 1.35v that shortens life more than frequency at say 1.1v). But even then, you're still talking several years. "Electro-migration" is not really an issue on most systems.As for 3570k vs 4670k, the latter is about 5-10% faster than the former, but runs a little hotter and overclocks less. There's otherwise very little difference in them (which as mentioned above is a good example of precisely why people don't upgrade every year now). I had an Athlon 64, then skipped Core2Duo and bought an i3-530, then skipped Sandy Bridge and got an i5-3570 and am now skipping Haswell and looking 1-2 generations down the line. Either 3570k / 4670k CPU will be perfectly fine for the next few years. Even today many "quad-core optimized" games don't come close to maxing all cores out, and after the new consoles come out, that will be fairly static for the next 7 years too, so you'll see the same thing we see today - games engines aren't pushing PC's anywhere near to the max due to consoles being stagnant during the second half of their lifespans.Whichever chip you pick, you're "good to go" for a few years for gaming, and more than enough for a "work box".
      0 0
      W
      wranglehyndburn 9 years ago
      Help OC 4.4 i5 3570k Asrock z77 Extreme 4Hi i want to oc (4.4) my i5 3570 but none of the online guide help me to do that.My HW:-i5 3570k-asrock z77 extreme 4-2x4gb vengeance lp 9-9-9-24 1.5v 1600-Macho revb hr-02My test:Thanks
      0 0
      M
      midnightweird 9 years ago
      Some 1150 systems get random instability at idle if the above listed c-states are left enabled, and mine was one of them. You can try leaving them on "auto", but if you get random crashes, that might be why.
      0 0
      E
      embargoplay 7 years ago
      fx 8350 or i5 3570kHi guys im just wondering is it worth me getting an i5 3570k, im running an AMD chip at the moment but wanted to jump to intel for better performance but is it worth me buying an intel board and CPU or just upgrade my CPU.games i play include fortnite, pubg, cs go, games i would like to play in the future new BF and CODcurrent build - 700w corsair psuAMD Phenom x4 965be 3.4ghzasus mobo8gb corsair XMS3r9 280x 3gb gddr51TB seagate barracuda120gb SSD
      0 0
      E
      eraseavoid 7 years ago
      There is no upgrade you can do for £90 or even close to it that is WORTH doing really. I think it's a waste of your money and that you'll find you are still in a condition seriously hampered by a lack of CPU performance regardless what graphics card you go with.Honestly though, if you can find a Haswell refresh 4690, 4690k, 4790 or 4790k, or even a Haswell non-refresh i5 or i7 for a decent price along with a board, then that might be a good path that will allow you to still use your DDR3.Otherwise, any really worthwhile upgrade is going to require a new CPU, motherboard and memory. More like in the 250 range.Something like this would be a tremendous improvement. Save another £150 and you'd be a lot happier, for a lot longer, than with anything you can do on those old platforms.PCPartPicker part list / Price breakdown by merchantCPU: AMD - Ryzen 5 1400 3.2GHz Quad-Core Processor (£104.99 @ Amazon UK) Motherboard: Asus - PRIME B450-PLUS ATX AM4 Motherboard (£89.99 @ AWD-IT) Memory: Team - Vulcan 8GB (2 x 4GB) DDR4-2400 Memory (£59.99 @ Overclockers.co.uk) Total: £254.97Prices include shipping, taxes, and discounts when availableGenerated by PCPartPicker 2018-09-24 00:38 BST+0100
      0 0
      C
      crapulousmixture 10 years ago
      "Intel Core i5 3570K" still ok?is a "Intel Core i5 3570K 3,4Ghz" still an ok CPU and is it worth upgrading to it from a Intel C2Q Q9550 (same frequncy 3.4GHZ)?
      0 0
      H
      hardwoodgeodesic 10 years ago
      Yea I think its an awesome deal. A used 3570k still goes for around $170 on ebay alone. Add the ram and mobo and you got a killer deal there. The mounting should be the exact same, ATX boards are for the most part universal, only on random odd balls like oem boards would you find non standard alignment. You should have no issues with your current install .BTW does this come with the stock cooler or an aftermarket one? The stock cooler is OK and will work with a slight OC around 4-4.2ghz but nothing beyond that, you'll need a good after market to go futher. Mine ran fine for two years at 4.2 OC on stock cooler no change to voltages, temps around 60c during heavy gaming. Be sure no matter if its stock or aftermarket cooler to removed the old thermal paste and apply a clean install. Something like Gelid GC Extremem is the best but is pricey around $12 but something cheaper $5-$6 like MX2, Artic Silver 5, or ZALMAN ZM - STG1 if you not really comfortable installing Thermal compound. All will work better than old compound
      0 0
      M
      mourneinvention 10 years ago
      i5 3570K Upgrade?I'm considering building a new PC, and I currently have a i5 3570K overlocked to 4.2 ghz with air cooling.My question: If I do build I new PC, should I invest in a new processor, or just sit tight with the 3570K for now? I'm gonna go with a small mini-itx case in my new build, so I'm going to have to purchase another mobo either way.Thanks guys
      0 0
      O
      onlookerbolham 10 years ago
      I think the 10-20% boost is a little high. Those are numbers on a good day. The averages for the increase in performances are actually sub 10%. http://www.anandtech.com/show/8227/devils-canyon-review-intel-core-i7-4790k-and-i5-4690k/5http://www.anandtech.com/bench/CPU/1107http://www.anandtech.com/show/7003/the-haswell-review-intel-core-i74770k-i54560k-tested/6
      0 0