Key Slides from Intel thirteenth Gen “Raptor Lake” Send off Show Break
The most succulent pieces of the Intel thirteenth Gen Center “Raptor Lake” send off press-deck recently spilled, politeness of Igor’s Lab. They uncover the six SKUs Intel will make a big appearance the thirteenth Gen Center work area processor series with, feature key contrasts with the past gen “Alder Lake,” and furthermore detail what the new Intel Z790 chipset offers of real value. In any case, the first-flood of thirteenth Gen Center processors will incorporate six SKUs — the Center i9-13900K, i9-13900KF, i7-13700K, i7-13700KF, i5-13600K, and the i5-13600KF. The – K and – KF parts are indistinguishable from one another, spare for the absence of incorporated illustrations with the – KF ones.
A large number of the vital specs of these six SKUs were at that point spilled to the web alongside those of a few SKUs from future rushes of thirteenth Gen SKUs, however this slide affirms a modest bunch fascinating specs connected with power. The slide affirms 125 W as the Processor Base Power an incentive for each of the six SKUs, 253 W as the Most extreme Super Power an incentive for the Center i9 and Center i7 K/KF SKUs; and 181 W as the Greatest Super Power for the Center i5 K/KF SKUs. This is a distinct move forward from the 241 W MTP for the past gen Center i9, 190 W MTP for the Center i7, and 150 W MTP for the Center i5. Obviously, these cutoff points resemble a fence impeding your way, you can loosen up them in the motherboard Profiles.
The following slide subtleties the critical contrasts between the twelfth Gen “Alder Lake” and thirteenth Gen “Raptor Lake.” The greatest center count has gone up to 8P+16E. The P-centers are updated with higher IPC and L2 reserve; the E-centers are redesigned with higher L2 store. The PCI-Express I/O from the central processor is unaltered — 16 PCIe Gen 5 paths for Stake, 4 PCIe Gen 4 paths for computer chip connected M.2 NVMe. Conversely, the Ryzen 7000 is affirmed to include Gen 5 computer processor appended M.2 NVMe. The DDR5 memory speed has been expanded to DDR5-5600 local, up from DDR5-4800.
The slide itemizing the new Intel Z790 chipset is generally fascinating. The chipset transport is unaltered at DMI 4.0 x8 (transfer speed equivalent to PCI-Express 4.0 x8). While the past gen Z690 puts out 12x PCIe Gen 4 and 16x PCIe Gen 3 downstream paths, the new Z790 puts out an amazing 20x PCIe Gen 4 and 8x PCIe Gen 3 paths. The USB network is generally indistinguishable aside from that the Z790 puts out five 20 Gbps USB 3.2×2 ports, rather than four on the Z690.
Intel is supposed to report the thirteenth Gen Center “Raptor Lake” processor series and Z790 chipset on September 27. The series will be extended with more SKUs, and less expensive motherboard chipsets, like the B760, later.