The Serpent Rider wrote on Today, 12:38:
Desktop Ivy-Bridge has a regular paste under IHS instead of solder. These CPUs are almost 14 years old.
It's not the age alone that degrades the thermal compound.
It's the length of time spent at high temperatures* that do it.
* high temperatures = anywhere north of 65-70C for most older common compounds, typically.
If that i5-3570k was used with one of those short Intel stock coolers with push pins (and it probably was, since -k parts generally shipped for the boxed version of the CPU, whereas non-k [OEM] parts were cooled by whatever cooler the OEMs [Dell, HP, etc.] specified... which were generally better than the stock Intel one), chances are it ran that hot under load quite frequently.
AberTim wrote on Today, 11:16:
My question is, does anyone "know for sure" if the 'k' versions (when new) did have the same low
power consumption as the plain i5-3570?
Not 100% sure, since the -k versions are usually better-clocked parts too, IIRC.
How are you measuring the average power consumption?
I generally don't trust sensor data from older hardware too much - not because of age, but because it wasn't always calibrated well or too accurate. Voltage readings in BIOS on old motherboard are a prime example. By the 2010's, of course, some of the sensors became much better too, so I wouldn't completely discard your results either. But IMO, the best way to know for sure is to grab a Kill-A-Watt or similar power meter along with both the -k and non-k version of the CPU, and then swap between them in the same system to compare the results - ideally under desktop conditions and on an OS that doesn't have a "mind of its own" like Windows 10 or 11 (i.e. where random updates or whatever other background gags can screw with the results.) So that leaves Windows 7 and older or some such similar flavor of Linux... but obviously that might be a little more work for your here than you might be willing to do, which I would understand if you didn't. Just saying what would be the "ideal" way to measure the power consumption more accurately.