i5 or i7?

For rendering purposes the i7 comes into its own league, it is simply amazing at rendering and encoding processes and the like.
However don't get me wrong the i5 is still a brilliant CPU but if the main use is for encoding etc then the i7 would be the best choice.
 
For rendering purposes the i7 comes into its own league, it is simply amazing at rendering and encoding processes and the like.
However don't get me wrong the i5 is still a brilliant CPU but if the main use is for encoding etc then the i7 would be the best choice.

Which of the i7 would you recommend then taking into account I was going to get the i5 750 and clock it to 4GHz
 
Thanks for that, after comparing your right, there is not a great deal of difference so why is the i7 920 £50 more than the i5 750?

As Meaker said, most i7s run on the 1366 chipset which is likely going to be used for newer tech whereas the i5 (1156) chipset won't be. The 1366 i7s also use Hyper-threading technology which essentially gives you double the amount of cores (so in quad-cores it should give eight) which is why they perform very well in CPU-intensive tasks.

I do believe there was a thread on here somewhere comparing the i7 920 and i5 750 in many different tasks. When it came to encoding I think the i5 was around 70% slower in some cases... Of course this doesn't mean that it is slow in any sense of the word, merely when comparing to the i7 in that scenario it was deemed "slow".
 
Ok I will tell the system I had in mind and if you think I can change the parts for a reasonable price please let me know. £450 for processor, mobo, ram, and psu.

£120 - ASUS P7P55D = http://www.overclockers.co.uk/showproduct.php?prodid=MB-360-AS

£160 - i5 750 - http://www.overclockers.co.uk/showproduct.php?prodid=CP-299-IN

£90 - OCZ 4GB 1600MHZ dual channel - http://www.overclockers.co.uk/showproduct.php?prodid=MY-180-OC

£80 - Corsair TX650W - http://www.overclockers.co.uk/showproduct.php?prodid=CA-008-CS&groupid=701&catid=123&subcat=1084
 
I assume the OP is also going to invest in a fast hard disk or an SSD as this could be a bottleneck in the system too.

OP = PC user right?

Yes I will set-up Raid 0 but I won't need that until I need to record uncompressed. I already have a Seagate Barracuda 7200.12 - 500GB but it is 16MB cache so I will get another 2 at 32MB cache as I read more cache is better for writing and that is why I am building this system.
 
OP = PC user right?

Yes I will set-up Raid 0 but I won't need that until I need to record uncompressed. I already have a Seagate Barracuda 7200.12 - 500GB but it is 16MB cache so I will get another 2 at 32MB cache as I read more cache is better for writing and that is why I am building this system.

OP can either mean opening thread or this case opening poster.

I would also look at the Samsung F3 and Western Digital Caviar Black ranges too.
Cache is important but also the speed and number of platters is also important to look at too!!

The Samsung F3 1TB is a very fast hard disk:

http://www.bit-tech.net/hardware/storage/2009/10/06/samsung-spinpoint-f3-1tb-review/1
 
When it came to encoding I think the i5 was around 70% slower in some cases... Of course this doesn't mean that it is slow in any sense of the word, merely when comparing to the i7 in that scenario it was deemed "slow".

dont be daft in extreme cases hyperthreading offers upto 20% more performance compared to no hyperthreading.

i7 920 is not 70% faster at anything compared to an i5 750 its not even possible when the chips are so similar
 
dont be daft in extreme cases hyperthreading offers upto 20% more performance compared to no hyperthreading.

i7 920 is not 70% faster at anything compared to an i5 750 its not even possible when the chips are so similar

This is so confusing as I am getting so many mixed reviews LOL!

Is it worth not going for the i5 750 socket 1156 and stepping up to an i7 with socket 1366?
 
Given that the OP is all about rendering then Hyperthreading will provide a significant performance boost.
You should be looking at either the i7-860 or the i7-920 as these both offer the performance benefit of HT where the i5 range does not.
IMHO the i7 860 would be the sweet spot. Teamed up with a Samsung F3 HDD as Cat said above.
 
As much as i7 920 will certainly help in that, the main question is:
"Do I really need to do it so fast? "

Whats your current setup, how fast does it deal with task and how much faster you'd like it to do it?

How often do you do that as well?

I mean, you don't really need i7 or even i5 if it's once a week odd render or something ...
 
As much as i7 920 will certainly help in that, the main question is:
"Do I really need to do it so fast? "

Whats your current setup, how fast does it deal with task and how much faster you'd like it to do it?

How often do you do that as well?

I mean, you don't really need i7 or even i5 if it's once a week odd render or something ...

I always settle for what I need at the time and regret it so this time I want to go for the best I can get within a decent price range.

I am going to record and render everyday pretty much.

My current set up is:
*Gigabyte Technology M61PME-S2P motherboard
*AMD Athlon II x2 dual core 245 - 2.9ghz - 2mb L2 cache processor
*Kingston hyper X 4gb (2 x 2gb) DDR2 800mhz dual channel ram
*ATI Radeon 4850 GDDR3 PCI express - 512mb graphics card
*Seagate barracuda 7200.12 - 500gb - 7200rpm - 16mb cache - average 8.5 seconds seek time
*Corsair VX450W power supply

My plan from the advice of these guys is to get a new CPU, mobo, psu and perhaps grab a couple of samsung spinspoint HDD in raid 0.

As far as I am aware the ATI 4850 should be fine!?!?
 
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