" rel="nofollow - As Parsec said, any i7 K or X class CPU can be overclocked on the X99 WS-E/10G.
Xeon CPUs have not been overclockable for a quite some time now. You can, to a very small extent, increase the BCLK of a Xeon but you lose stability as soon as you pass 105Mhz, in many cases not even 5mhz over stock on the BCLK is stable. In essence it is a pointless exercise as the performance increase is barely noticeable even in synthetic benchmarks let alone real world use. Xeons are intended for long running, stable server/workstation systems so intel takes every possible step to ensure failures, crashing and corruption do not happen. There may be a few engineering samples out there that have an unlocked multi but these would be very rare and exceedingly difficult/illegal to procure. If memory serves unlocked Xeons are used in house by intel for testing purposes only so as such, any that find their way into the wild have been leaked illegally. As most may know, an engineering sample remains the property of the manufacturer (Intel/AMD etc) and are not allowed to be sold or traded. In general I always advise against purchasing ES CPUs for this reason.
I want to build a completely new system and would like to avoid the same mistake I made witht my previous system which had a X97 that cant overclock the CPU. |
You mean H97 or X99 or X79? There was no X97 chipset ever made. Some board manufacturers do not permit overclocking on their boards, even if the chipset and CPU both support it. Intel's own boards (now discontinued) never support overclocking for example. Many Server grade boards do the same.
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