Tag Archives: Raptor

Intel issues statement on Raptor Lake crashes, asks mobo makers to revise extreme BIOS defaults – TechSpot

  1. Intel issues statement on Raptor Lake crashes, asks mobo makers to revise extreme BIOS defaults TechSpot
  2. Intel points at motherboard vendors for recent CPU instability issues but the chip maker isn’t entirely blame-free PC Gamer
  3. Intel blames aggressive motherboards for high-end CPU crashes PCWorld
  4. Intel issues its first statement in response to 13/14th Gen Core i9 CPU stability issues VideoCardz.com
  5. Intel issues statement about CPU crashes, blames motherboard makers — BIOSes disable thermal and power protection, causing issues Tom’s Hardware

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NVIDIA recommends Intel Raptor Lake CPU users to consult Intel in case of stability issues – VideoCardz.com

  1. NVIDIA recommends Intel Raptor Lake CPU users to consult Intel in case of stability issues VideoCardz.com
  2. Nvidia blames Intel for GPU VRAM errors, tells GeForce gamers experiencing 13th or 14th Gen CPU instability to contact Intel support Tom’s Hardware
  3. Intel investigating games crashing on 13th and 14th Gen Core i9 processors The Verge
  4. Nvidia issues important message to GeForce GPU and Intel CPU owners PCGamesN
  5. Intel’s 13th & 14th Gen CPU “Gaming Stability” Is Being Investigated As 10+ Chips Being Returned In Korea Each Day Wccftech

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Intel Meteor Lake CPUs With Up To 14 Cores, Raptor Lake Refresh With Up To 24 Cores For Next-Gen Laptops – Wccftech

  1. Intel Meteor Lake CPUs With Up To 14 Cores, Raptor Lake Refresh With Up To 24 Cores For Next-Gen Laptops Wccftech
  2. Intel Raptor Lake Refresh performance leak suggests up to 8% gain in single-core and 15% increase in multi-core workloads vs 13th gen Raptor Lake Notebookcheck.net
  3. Intel Meteor Lake specs leak lists 14 CPU cores and 8 Xe-Cores based on Xe-LPG architecture VideoCardz.com
  4. Intel Arrow Lake-S Desktop CPUs To Feature Support On Z890, B860 & H810 Motherboards Wccftech
  5. Intel Meteor Lake CPUs: everything we know so far TechRadar
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Intel 14th Gen Core “Raptor Lake Refresh” allegedly launching October, “Sapphire Rapids Refresh” in early 2024 – VideoCardz.com

  1. Intel 14th Gen Core “Raptor Lake Refresh” allegedly launching October, “Sapphire Rapids Refresh” in early 2024 VideoCardz.com
  2. Intel is officially killing off the “i” in Core i7 — as it goes Ultra The Verge
  3. Intel responds to the Apple silicon Mac Pro with its own ‘Ultra’ chips Macworld
  4. Intel Core i9-14900K and “Raptor Lake-S/HX Refresh” to use old Core series branding VideoCardz.com
  5. Intel Desktop CPU Rumors: Raptor Lake-S Refresh In October, Arrow Lake-S In Late 2024, Xeon W-2500 & W-3500 HEDT Refresh In 1H 2024 Wccftech
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Intel To Host Innovation 2023 Event on 19th September: Meteor Lake, Raptor Lake Refresh & Alchemist+ Expected – Wccftech

  1. Intel To Host Innovation 2023 Event on 19th September: Meteor Lake, Raptor Lake Refresh & Alchemist+ Expected Wccftech
  2. Efficient Intel Meteor Lake described as “Zen 4 Phoenix Killer” as leak claims Intel is working on a 40-core Arrow Lake CPU Notebookcheck.net
  3. Intel Innovation 2023 set for September 19, Raptor Lake Refresh launch? VideoCardz.com
  4. Intel’s Innovation 2023 conference revealed for September 19-20 Neowin
  5. Intel Panther Lake and Beast Lake leak suggests up to 40% more single-core performance vs Arrow Lake for former and Extra Big cores for latter Notebookcheck.net
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Intel Innovation 2023 set for September 19, Raptor Lake Refresh launch? – VideoCardz.com

  1. Intel Innovation 2023 set for September 19, Raptor Lake Refresh launch? VideoCardz.com
  2. Efficient Intel Meteor Lake described as “Zen 4 Phoenix Killer” as leak claims Intel is working on a 40-core Arrow Lake CPU Notebookcheck.net
  3. Intel Beast Lake: 10 performance cores and huge clocks to beat AMD’s X3D CPUs? TweakTown
  4. Intel’s Innovation 2023 conference revealed for September 19-20 Neowin
  5. Intel Panther Lake and Beast Lake leak suggests up to 40% more single-core performance vs Arrow Lake for former and Extra Big cores for latter Notebookcheck.net
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Intel reportedly working on “Raptor Lake Refresh”, AMD Ryzen 7000X3D might be limited to 8 cores (for now)

Please note that this post is tagged as a rumor.

Intel Raptor Lake Refresh & 8-core AMD Ryzen 7000X3D

According to ECSM, both Intel and AMD are to release updated CPU architectures next year. 

Starting in the first half of 2023 we should expect a launch of Intel Core i9-13900KS, a special SKU that Intel had already teased as its first 6 GHz processor. For the moment, this will be the fastest consumer desktop CPU, at least until AMD released their updated Ryzen 7000 series with 3D V-Cache.

The Chinese media outlet is not aware of any 12 or 16-core variants featuring the additional cache. This means that at least for now Ryzen 7000X3D may be limited to 6-core and 8-core configurations. However, this does not rule out a higher core count later. Furthermore, ECSM weights in on AM5 APU rumors, which may be limited to 8 cores as well. According to the information, those would only support DDR5-4800 memory.

Intel and AMD 2023 CPU Rumors, Source: ECSM_Official

2023-2024: Raptor Lake Refresh, Meteor Lake and Arrow Lake

Later in the year, between middle and late 2023, Intel is reportedly launching an updated Raptor Lake CPUs with 100 to 200 MHz higher clocks. Some rumors claim that we might see Meteor Lake-S already in late 2023, however ECSM claims otherwise.

Intel would be launching Arrow Lake and Meteor Lake in 2024. The latter is said to be limited to 6P+16E configuration, which means no high-end desktop models based on this architecture. Instead, Intel would use Arrow Lake for its desktop Core i7 and Core i9 SKUs. The media outlet is explaining the process nodes used by future architectures, which seem to be confusing to say the least.

Intel 2024 CPU Rumors, Source: ECSM_Official

Intel will be undergoing a socket change in 2024, most likely called LGA1851. This socket would reportedly be used by Meteor and Arrow Lake CPUs and possibly even their successor known as Panther Lake. Those architectures will compete with AMD Zen5 architecture which should be supported by the existing AM5 socket.

Source: ECSM_Official #1, #2



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Raptor Lake Refresh In 2023, Meteor Lake Up To Core i7 With 6+16, Arrow Lake Up To Core i9 With 8+16 SKUs In 2024

New rumors regarding Intel’s next-gen desktop CPU lineup including Raptor Lake Refresh, Meteor Lake & Arrow Lake have been disclosed.

Intel Readies Raptor Lake Refresh Desktop CPUs For Late Q3 2023, Meteor Lake Up To Core i7 & Arrow Lake Up To Core i9 In 2024

Once again, we have the latest rumors coming from Enthusiast Citizen who talks about at least 3 upcoming Intel Desktop CPU families. These include the Intel Raptor Lake Refresh, Meteor Lake & Arrow Lake. The details can be found below.

Intel 13th Gen Raptor Lake Refresh Desktop CPU Lineup (2023):

Intel won’t be moving away from its 13th Gen Raptor Lake CPUs for the majority of 2023. In fact, the company plans on launching a Raptor Lake Refresh family around the second half of 2023, or Q3 to be precise. This family will be based on a slightly optimized 10ESF node, allowing the blue team to squeeze 100 or 200 MHz more out of the chips.

The company will also be launching the flagship Core i9-13900KS early next year but that’s not a part of the Raptor Lake Refresh family. A small bump in frequency may not be noticeable and won’t deliver the same kind of gains that AMD offers with its next-gen X3D parts which are expected in the first half of 2023. The 13th Gen Raptor Lake family will be compatible with the existing Intel LGA 1700/1800 socket.

Intel 14th Gen Meteor Lake Desktop CPU Lineup (2024)

Intel’s 14th Gen Meteor Lake-S Desktop CPUs will take a step back and reduce the number of P-Cores while retaining the number of E-Cores. The lineup listed in leaked charts includes five different SKU configurations with the top variants featuring up to 22 cores in a combination of 6 P-Cores and 16 E-Cores. The P-Cores on the Meteor Lake CPUs are based on the brand-new Redwood Cove architecture while the E-Cores will utilize the Crestmont design. Both of these are new and improved architecture as reported by Coelacanth-Dream a few weeks back.

The full list of configurations includes:

  • Meteor Lake-S 22 (6P + 16E) / 4 Xe Cores / 125W TDP
  • Meteor Lake-S 22 (6P + 16E) / 4 Xe Cores / 65W TDP
  • Meteor Lake-S 22 (6P + 16E) / 4 Xe Cores / 35W TDP
  • Meteor Lake-S 14 (6P + 8E) / 4 Xe Cores / 65WTDP
  • Meteor Lake-S 14 (6P + 8E) / 4 Xe Cores / 35WTDP

In addition to the SKUs, we also get to learn that all SKUs will feature at least 4 Xe Cores for the iGPU and that’s going to offer 64 Execution Units or 512 ALUs. That’s 2 Xe Cores less than the DG2-powered Arc A310 graphics card which is the lowest-tier discrete board in the family but an integrated GPU with this much capability will be on par or even better than the RDNA 2 iGPU on AMD’s Ryzen 7000 Desktop CPUs. Only the top die configuration will have a 125W “Unlocked” SKU range while the rest will come in the standard “Non-K” and “T” series with 65W and 35W TDPs.

The one thing to note here is that the 14th Gen Meteor Lake CPUs will only be available in up to Core i7 parts and there will be no Core i9 part due to the lowered core count. The CPU will retain the Intel 4 (CPU) + TSMC N5 (tGPU) + TSMC N6 (SOC) process nodes.

Intel 15th Gen Arrow Lake Desktop CPU Lineup (2024)

The Intel 15th Gen Arrow Lake-S Desktop CPUs will bring back the 24 cores that we get on Raptor Lake CPUs today. The Arrow Lake-S top die will utilize up to 24 cores which will be a combination of 8 Performance Cores and 16 Efficiency Cores. According to the Enthusiast Citizen, the lineup will only come in Core i7 and Core i9 flavors. The CPU will retain the Intel 4 (CPU) + TSMC N3 (GPU) SKU node layout. It is rumored that the 20A node won’t make its way to the desktop lineup. Following is the full list of SKUs to expect from the lineup:

  • Arrow Lake-S 24 (8P + 16E) / 4 Xe Cores / 125W TDP
  • Arrow Lake-S 24 (8P + 16E) / 4 Xe Cores / 65W TDP
  • Arrow Lake-S 24 (8P + 16E) / 4 Xe Cores / 35W TDP

Intel Desktop CPU Core Count Progression:

Family Name Total Cores Total Threads P-Cores E-Cores Year
Sandy Bridge 4 8 N/A N/A 2011
Ivy Bridge 4 8 N/A N/A 2012
Haswell 4 8 N/A N/A 2013
Broadwell 4 8 N/A N/A 2014
Skylake 4 8 N/A N/A 2015
Kaby Lake 4 8 N/A N/A 2017
Coffee Lake 6 12 N/A N/A 2017
Coffee Lake Refresh 8 16 N/A N/A 2018
Comet Lake 10 20 N/A N/A 2020
Rocket Lake 8 16 N/A N/A 2021
Alder Lake 16 24 8 8 2021
Raptor Lake 24 32 8 16 2022
Meteor Lake 22 28 6 16 ~2023
Arrow Lake 24 32 8 16 ~2024

The difference with the Arrow Lake-S lineup is that all of the configurations feature the top 24 core die and the only difference is the TDP itself. It is likely that lower core count SKUs will be derived from these dies. Intel also seems to have retained the 4 Xe Cores from the Meteor Lake lineup but we expect these to feature a brand new Arc graphics architecture. The 14th Gen Meteor Lake chips are based on a TSMC 5nm GPU architecture while the 15th Gen Arrow Lake CPUs will utilize a TSMC 3nm graphics architecture, as we reported here.

We can’t say for sure if Intel will retain the number of ALUs and EUs as the existing Alchemist chips on its future integrated GPUs but the Arrow Lake-P parts are expected to offer up to 2560 Xe Cores which is a 5x increase over the integrated GPUs on the desktop parts.

We know from previous reports that Intel is preparing a new socket known as “V” that will offer support for at least two generations of desktop CPUs, the Meteor Lake-S and Arrow Lake-S. This LGA 1851 socket will be very similar in dimensions to the existing LGA 1700/1800 socket but will offer more pins and added support for new/enhanced features.

During its recent investors call, Intel said that they are progressing really well on their Intel 4 & Intel 3 products. The 14th Gen Meteor Lake production stepping is scheduled to be delivered this quarter with a volume ramp in 2023 while Intel 3 is also expected to enter the early production phase by the end of 2023. Do note that these are early charts and we are still years away from the launch of Meteor Lake and Arrow Lake CPUs.

Intel Mainstream CPU Generations Comparison:

Intel CPU Family Processor Process Processor Architecture Processors Cores/Threads (Max) TDPs Platform Chipset Platform Memory Support PCIe Support Launch
Sandy Bridge (2nd Gen) 32nm Sandy Bridge 4/8 35-95W 6-Series LGA 1155 DDR3 PCIe Gen 2.0 2011
Ivy Bridge (3rd Gen) 22nm Ivy Bridge 4/8 35-77W 7-Series LGA 1155 DDR3 PCIe Gen 3.0 2012
Haswell (4th Gen) 22nm Haswell 4/8 35-84W 8-Series LGA 1150 DDR3 PCIe Gen 3.0 2013-2014
Broadwell (5th Gen) 14nm Broadwell 4/8 65-65W 9-Series LGA 1150 DDR3 PCIe Gen 3.0 2015
Skylake (6th Gen) 14nm Skylake 4/8 35-91W 100-Series LGA 1151 DDR4 PCIe Gen 3.0 2015
Kaby Lake (7th Gen) 14nm Skylake 4/8 35-91W 200-Series LGA 1151 DDR4 PCIe Gen 3.0 2017
Coffee Lake (8th Gen) 14nm Skylake 6/12 35-95W 300-Series LGA 1151 DDR4 PCIe Gen 3.0 2017
Coffee Lake (9th Gen) 14nm Skylake 8/16 35-95W 300-Series LGA 1151 DDR4 PCIe Gen 3.0 2018
Comet Lake (10th Gen) 14nm Skylake 10/20 35-125W 400-Series LGA 1200 DDR4 PCIe Gen 3.0 2020
Rocket Lake (11th Gen) 14nm Cypress Cove 8/16 35-125W 500-Series LGA 1200 DDR4 PCIe Gen 4.0 2021
Alder Lake (12th Gen) Intel 7 Golden Cove (P-Core)
Gracemont (E-Core)
16/24 35-125W 600 Series LGA 1700/1800 DDR5 / DDR4 PCIe Gen 5.0 2021
Raptor Lake (13th Gen) Intel 7 Raptor Cove (P-Core)
Gracemont (E-Core)
24/32 35-125W 700-Series LGA 1700/1800 DDR5 / DDR4 PCIe Gen 5.0 2022
Meteor Lake (14th Gen) Intel 4 Redwood Cove (P-Core)
Crestmont (E-Core)
22/28 35-125W 800 Series? LGA 1851 DDR5 PCIe Gen 5.0 2023
Arrow Lake (15th Gen) Intel 20A Lion Cove (P-Core)
Skymont (E-Core)
24/32 TBA 900-Series? LGA 1851 DDR5 PCIe Gen 5.0 2024
Lunar Lake (16th Gen) Intel 18A TBD TBA TBA 1000-Series? TBA DDR5 PCIe Gen 5.0? 2025
Nova Lake (17th Gen) Intel 18A TBD TBA TBA 2000-Series? TBA DDR5? PCIe Gen 6.0? 2026

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Raptor Lake Brings More Bite

Today marks the release of Intel’s 13th generation Core processor series, codenamed Raptor Lake. The first models to be unleashed into retail channels are all overclockable parts, with six SKUs across the Core i9, i7, and i5 product segments. We’ve seen Intel’s heterogeneous or hybrid design with the launch of Intel’s Alder Lake (12th Gen Core) products, and the latest Raptor Lake core brings a very similar design to the table, but with subtle improvements designed to help give Intel the leading edge in the desktop market.

The launch of Intel’s new lineup is essentially the second half of this fall’s desktop CPU releases. AMD got the first word in a few weeks back with the launch of their Ryzen 7000 desktop processors, which introduced the Zen 4 architecture as well a significant platform update for AMD with Socket AM5. The new high-end Ryzen chips were well-received (if a bit expensive), setting a new bar for performance and putting AMD firmly into the lead, at least for a little bit. Now it’s time for Intel’s own CPU launch – their rebuttal – where they get to show off what they’ve been working on over the past few years and whether they can retain their edge over AMD for this latest generation of processors.

At a high level, Raptor Lake can be thought of as a mid-cycle upgrade of sorts for Intel’s current LGA-1700 platform. As the company launched Alder Lake and LGA-1700 just a year ago, they aren’t looking to overhaul the core CPU architecture quite so soon, nor the platform for that matter. Intel is keeping to their two-year platform cycle here, so the 13th generation of Core processors are designed to bring more performance to the same platform as Alder Lake. This makes the Raptor Lake launch significantly more straightforward than AMD’s recent launch, where AMD overhauled their entire platform while also making some more significant CPU architecture upgrades in the process.

Because Intel isn’t significantly tweaking their CPU architectures for Raptor Lake, the chip is essentially a refined version of Alder Lake. That means we’re still looking at a mixture of P(erformance) and E(fficiency) CPU cores, based on different CPU architectures and designed to allow Intel to hit high performance levels in both single/light-threaded workloads that favor the P cores, and heavily multi-threaded workloads that can also saturate the E cores. The P cores are based on what’s technically a new architecture, Raptor Cove, while the E cores are still based on the same Gracemont architecture as what we saw on Alder Lake.

We’ll dive into the internal bits of Raptor Lake a bit later on, but at a high level, Intel is improving performance versus Alder Lake in three ways.

  1. Higher clockspeeds, especially for the P cores, thanks to some architectural optimization work combined with further refinements of the Intel 7 fab process
  2. Additional E cores in all desktop SKUs, to boost performance in multi-threaded workloads
  3. Additional L2 cache for both the P and E cores. The L3 cache is also a bit larger, primarily to accommodate the larger number of E cores.

The higher clockspeeds and additional cache mean that Raptor Lake should be faster in virtually all scenarios compared to Alder Lake. For single-threaded and lightly-threaded workloads, the faster P cores can chew through work. Meanwhile the full combination of additional E cores and higher clockspeeds means that multi-threaded performance often shows even greater gains.

Raptor Lake will, in time, be a top-to-bottom launch for Intel and its partners. That means not only launching desktop processors, as we’re seeing the first of today, but also a complete stack of mobile parts, with U, P, H, and HX series processors all planned. And while mobile parts are a bit trickier with regards to adding clocks and cores while staying within a power budget, Intel’s design optimizations can also be used to improve energy efficiency instead, which will be of greater importance for the mobile market.

Starting At the Top: Core i9-13900K, i7-13700K, and i5-13600K

But to start things off, let’s talk about today’s launch. Intel has opted for a top-to-bottom, desktop-to-mobile launch strategy, pulling the trigger on its overclockable desktop parts first. This is typical of Intel’s recent desktop launches, and allows them to get their relatively lower volume desktop chips out first while continuing to ramp for higher volume desktop and mobile parts. Altogether Intel is launching 3 tiers of chips spread over 6 SKUs, all overclockable (K) and coming either with and without (F) integrated graphics.

Intel 13th Gen Core, Raptor Lake
AnandTech Cores
P+E/T
P-Core
Base
P-Core
Turbo
E-Core
Base
E-Core
Turbo
L3 Cache
(MB)
IGP Base
W
Turbo
W
Price
($)
i9-13900K 8+16/32 3300 5800 2200 4300 36 770 125 253 $589
i9-13900KF 8+16/32 3300 5800 2200 4300 36 125 253 $564
 
i7-13700K 8+8/24 3400 5400 2500 4200 30 770 125 253 $409
i7-13700KF 8+8/24 3400 5400 2500 4200 30 125 253 $384
 
i5-13600K 6+8/20 3500 5100 2600 3900 24 770 125 181 $319
i5-13600KF 6+8/20 3500 5100 2600 3900 24 125 181 $294

Compared to the relevant 12th Gen Core SKUs, Intel has replaced the P cores with new Raptor Cove cores on a 1:1 basis. Meanwhile for the E cores, Intel has effectively doubled the number of E cores for each corresponding SKU. e.g., the Core i5-13600K now has eight E-cores whereas the Core i5-12600K had four. Otherwise, TDPs remain unchanged from the previous chips, with Intel officially targeting 125W – though PL2 limits have crept up from 241W to 253W.


Intel Core i9-13900K CPU-Z

Focusing first on the flagship chip, the Core i9-13900K has an incredible max P-core turbo of 5.8 GHz. This is an increase of 600 MHz over the Core i9-12900K. Although it has the same performance core count as its predecessor (though with Raptor Cove cores), it now features double the efficiency cores; a total of 24 hybrid cores comprised of 8P and 16E cores. This makes for eight more threads, for a total of 32, up from 24 on the Core i9-12900K. 

One thing to note about the efficiency cores is that Intel has lowered the base frequency of these cores to 2.2 GHz base, which is down from 2.4GHz on Alder Lake. But at the same time, however, they have also increased the E-core max turbo clockspeed to 4.3 GHz, 400Mhz higher than the 3.9 GHz cores on Alder Lake.

Intel has made similar trade-offs across all of its 13th Gen Core SKUs – so this isn’t just the case for the i9 parts, but also the i7 and i5 parts as well. Ultimately while Intel would ideally like to run the E cores at their highest clockspeeds at all times, the expanded number of cores makes it harder to stay within Intel’s official 125W TDP, necessitating a reduction on the base clockspeeds.


Intel Core i5-13600K CPU-Z

Moving down the stack, the Core i7-13700K and KF processors both have a total of sixteen CPU cores (8P+8E), which is up from 8P+4E on the Core i7-12700K. For these parts the maximum P-core turbo clockspeed is 5.4 GHz, while the P-core base clockspeed stands at 3.4 GHz.

Finally, filling out the i5 spot in Intel’s lineup is the Core i5-13600K, which we will also be testing today. The 13600K parts come with a total of fourteen cores in 6P+8E configuration, four more cores than on the Alder Lake i5-12600K. Both the Core i5-13600K and i5-13600KF feature a P-core max turbo of up to 5.1 GHz (up from 4.9 GHz), and an E-core turbo of up to 3.9 GHz (up from 3.6 GHz).

Z790 Chipset & DDR5-5600 Support

The launch of the 13th Gen Core chips also comes with a new generation of motherboards from Intel: Z790. As noted earlier, the 13th Gen Core chips are backwards-compatible with 600 series boards (with the necessary BIOS update), so they can be used as a drop-in upgrade or as part of a fresh built. But for builders looking for the best – or even just guaranteed CPU compatibility out of the box – Intel is hoping to entice you with Z790.

Like the rest of the Raptor Lake platform, Z790 is not a significant overhaul of Intel’s existing wares. But Z790 does offer perks. Most notable for aspiring builders will be that Z790 boards will be the first boards validated for the higher DDR5 memory speeds that Raptor Lake is capable of. Whereas Alder Lake officially topped out at DDR5-4800, Alder Lake can run at DDR5-5600, helping to feed the beast a bit more with higher memory clockspeeds. Enthusiasts will likely run overclocked with XMP kits, but for anyone building systems to spec – be it OEMs or individual builders – this is a nice bump in bandwidth. Meanwhile it should be noted that there’s nothing stopping existing Z690 boards from being validated for higher speeds as well, but that will be up to motherboard manufacturers running a fresh round of validation with the new Raptor Lake chips.

As for the Z790 chipset itself, it brings a bit more I/O flexibility compared to Z690. Z790 now sports 20 PCIe 4 lanes, versus 12 on Z690. That’s augmented with 8 PCIe 3 lanes, 8 fewer than on Z690. Z790 also brings support for one more USB 20Gbps (USB 3.2 Gen 2×2) port than its predecessor, making for a total of 5.

Sizing Up the Competition: 13th Gen Core vs. Ryzen 7000

With Intel’s shift to a heterogeneous CPU architecture, like-for-like comparisons between Intel and AMD have become a little harder. None the less, as AMD and Intel have evolved to have similarly-named product stacks – and for that matter similar pricing – it’s not too hard to line up what chips are primarily in competition with each other.

Raptor Lake Competition
AnandTech Core i9
13900K
Core i5
13600K
Core i9
12900K
Core i5
12600K
  Ryzen 9
7950X
Ryzen 5
7600X
uArch Raptor Cove +
Gracemont
Raptor Cove +
Gracemont
Golden Cove +
Gracemont
Golden Cove +
Gracemont
  Zen 4 Zen 4
Cores 8P + 16E
32 T
6P + 8E
20 T
8P + 8E
24 T
6P + 4E
16 T
  16 C
32 T
6 C
12 T
Base Freq (P) 3300 3500 3200 3700   4500 4700
Turbo Freq (P) 5800 5100 5200 4900   5700 5300
TDP 125 W 125 W 125 W 125 W   170 W 105 W
PL2/PPT 253 W 181 W 241 W 150 W   230 W 142 W
iGPU / Cores Xe-LP, 32 Xe-LP, 32 Xe-LP, 32 Xe-LP, 32   RDNA 2, 2 RDNA 2, 2
L3 Cache 36 MB 24 MB 30 MB 20 MB   64 MB 32 MB
DDR5 2 x 5600 2 x 5600 2 x 4800 2 x 4800   2 x 5200 2 x 5200
CPU PCIe 5.0 x16 +
4.0 x4
5.0 x16 +
4.0 x4
5.0 x16 +
4.0 x4
5.0 x16 +
4.0 x4
  5.0 x28 5.0 x28
MSRP $589 $319 $589 $289   $699 $299

At the high-end, Intel is going up against AMD’s flagship with fewer P cores (or their AMD equivalent), but is augmenting that with a much larger number of E cores. As a result Intel has more CPU cores to offer overall, but the performance implications are very workload dependent. The 13900K shines on tasks that can fill all 24 cores/32 threads, and ideally can account for the difference in performance between the core types. Otherwise, AMD offers fewer total cores, but more performance on a per-core basis when 9 to 16 cores are needed.

In Intel’s favor is a lower CPU cost ($589 vs. $699), as well as official support for faster DDR5 memory (and DDR4, if you need it). Whereas AMD offers more I/O flexibility with up to 28 PCIe 5 lanes coming from the CPU, as well as a larger overall L3 cache.

Meanwhile at the other end of the spectrum, the bottom of the stack for the two companies is brought up by the i5-13600K and Ryzen 5 7600K. The Intel chip offers 6 Raptor Cove P cores to AMD’s 6 Zen 4 cores, and then Intel added 8 E cores on top of that. But in this case Intel no longer has the price advantage, as the 13600K is $20 more expensive than its AMD competition. This gives Intel a potentially large advantage in multi-threaded workloads, though for fewer threads, AMD does have a bit of a clockspeed lead.

  1. Intel Core i9-13900K and i5-13600K Review: Raptor Cove, What’s New?
  2. Raptor Lake In Detail: Raptor Cove P-Cores, More Efficiency Cores
  3. Z790 Chipset: More I/O Than Z690, But Same Performance
  4. Test Bed and Setup: Updating Our Test Suite for 2023
  5. Core to Core Latency
  6. SPEC2017 Single-Threaded Results
  7. SPEC2017 Multi-Threaded Results
  8. CPU Benchmark Performance: Power and Office
  9. CPU Benchmark Performance: Science
  10. CPU Benchmark Performance: Simulation
  11. CPU Benchmark Performance: Rendering And Encoding
  12. CPU Benchmark Performance: Legacy Tests
  13. Gaming Performance: iGPU
  14. Gaming Performance: 720p and Lower
  15. Gaming Performance: 1080p
  16. Gaming Performance: 1440p
  17. Gaming Performance: 4K
  18. Closing Thoughts

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Intel Core i9-13900KF Raptor Lake CPU Easily Overclocks To 6.2 GHz On An AIO Cooler

Intel’s Core i9-13900KF Raptor Lake CPU featuring 24 cores has been overclocked to a 6.2 GHz clock speed using an AIO Liquid cooler, quite easily.

Recently, an Overclock.net (OCN) user was reported to have purchased and received the Intel Core i9-13900KF Raptor Lake CPU before it was available to consumers. The user sold the processor to another OCN user, who then put the chip from Intel to test to see if it could surpass the reported boost clock frequency, which is 5.8GHz.

User Coodiee1337 from OCN connected a Corsair iCUE H150I RGB Elite AIO cooler to the Thermal Grizzly CPU contact frame that held the powerful Intel processor. The memory used in the system was the G.Skill DDR5-6000 CL36 memory.

Intel Core i9-13900KF overclocking information provided by ASUS ROG CPU-Z software. Image source: Coodiee1337.

Coodiee1337 tested the processor’s performance using Cinebench R23 and 3DMark applications. In the Cinebench R23 test, for single-core results, the OCN user achieved 2352 points while reaching 6.2 GHz boost clock frequencies while maintaining 1.474V and a heat level of 75ºC during the overclocking. To achieve such a high OC result, Coodiee1337 utilized the ASUS ROG Maximus Z690 APEX integrated CPU tuner, which uses artificial intelligence to assist with the level. The choice of the motherboard was due to a lack of time and detail in testing the processor at the time. The result from Coodiee1337 places the Cinebench R23 mark in 13th place on the HWBOT website.

Intel Core i9-13900K 24 Core Raptor Lake CPU Specs

The Intel Core i9-13900K is the flagship Raptor Lake CPU, featuring 24 cores and 32 threads in an 8 P-Core and 16 E-Core configuration. The CPU is configured at a base clock of 3.0 GHz, a single-core boost clock of 5.8 GHz (1-2) cores, and an all-core boost clock of 5.5 GHz (all 8 P-Cores). The CPU features 68 MB of combined cache and a 125W PL1 rating that goes up to 253W. The CPU can also consume up to 350W of power when using the “Unlimited Power Mode” which we detailed here.

  • Core i9-13900K 8+16 (24/32) – 3.0 / 5.8 GHz – 66 MB Cache, 125W (PL1) / 253W (PL2)
  • Core i9-12900K 8+8 (16/24) – 3.2 / 5.2 GHz – 30 MB Cache, 125W (PL1) / 241W (PL2)

Intel 13th Gen ‘Raptor Lake’ CPUs Launch & Availability

As for launch and availability, the Intel 13th Gen Raptor Lake Desktop CPUs will launch alongside the 700-series chipset family today  Both AMD & Intel are known to push out their premium offerings first before moving into the mainstream/budget segment so expect Intel to introduce ‘K’ unlocked parts and Z790 boards before venturing into the non-K lineup.

Which flagship CPU are you most likely to get?Poll Options are limited because JavaScript is disabled in your browser.

News Sources: HWBOT, Overclock.net, VideoCardz

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