Intel Xeon E5-2687W Sandy Bridge-EP 3.1GHz (3.8GHz Turbo Boost) 20MB L3 Cache LGA 2011 150W BX80621E52687W Server Processor
₹98,572.00
Intel Xeon E5-2687W Sandy Bridge-EP 3.1GHz (3.8GHz Turbo Boost) 20MB L3 Cache LGA 2011 150W BX80621E52687W Server Processor,
Specification: Intel Xeon E5-2687W Sandy Bridge-EP 3.1GHz (3.8GHz Turbo Boost) 20MB L3 Cache LGA 2011 150W BX80621E52687W Server Processor
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3 reviews for Intel Xeon E5-2687W Sandy Bridge-EP 3.1GHz (3.8GHz Turbo Boost) 20MB L3 Cache LGA 2011 150W BX80621E52687W Server Processor
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₹98,572.00
Eric B. –
Pros: Tears through multithreaded apps. Fantastic for doing graphics software development with lots of multithreaded code. Makes it easy to see when your code is able to saturate the CPU and scale well with respect to core count. Further performance work can then target reducing overhead (minimizing locks and synchronizaton), and increasing throughput (optimizing inner-loops, and special-casing high-impact combinations of general rendering kernels). Even better, if you don’t want to get 2 of these, you can get 1 and run it on a regular single socket LGA2011 motherboard. Cons: Expensive. Runs hot. Multipliers are locked hard, so no overclocking.
Nick G. –
Pros: These are incredibly fast. I use 2 of them in a Supermicro X9DAE board with 256GB of ram. I get a cinebench score of 26.10. These processors will handle anything that you throw at them. I use dual Corsair H80i’s for cooling. Cons: Price. Really, almost 2 grand? I suppose with no competition at the top, Intel can charge whatever they want. Overall Review: These are a great buy for those who need the power. The rest of the people can settle for Intel’s 2011 or 1155 Core i7 series. If Intel released multiplier unlocked 2600 series Xeons, I’d be first in line to get them. When they launched the skulltrail board with the QX9775 cpu’s, they were on a roll. I wish they would continue the trend. Give us something more overclockable and more powerful, Intel! I realize that most people that own these are not interested in overclocking them. But shouldn’t the challenge be there anyway?
Robert B. –
Pros: 8 cores / 16 threads, makes rendering a breeze. $$$ is high but you don’t get what you don’t pay for. Really lets crossfire cards breathe. Cons: Needed a towel to clean up after the dirty tasks required to pay for this.