Monday, April 1st 2013
Intel Core i7 "Ivy Bridge-E" HEDT Lineup Detailed
Intel's Core "Haswell" processor family may be just around the corner (June 2013), but that isn't stopping enthusiasts from looking out for the next HEDT (high-end desktop) processor from Intel, codenamed "Ivy Bridge-E." The new lineup could look similar to the company's current Core i7 "Sandy Bridge-E," in that it features a quad-core part in the $300-400 range, a six-core unlocked part in the $500-600 range, and an Extreme Edition six-core part around $1000. All three parts will be available in the LGA2011 package, and compatible with current X79 chipset-based motherboards (BIOS update could be needed). DDR3-1866 MHz could become the standard memory frequency for these chips.
The lineup will begin with Core i7-4820, a quad-core chip with a nominal clock speed of 3.70 GHz, Turbo Boost speed of 3.90 GHz, and 10 MB shared L3 cache. Moving on, there's the Core i7-4930K, a six-core chip with an unlocked BClk multiplier, nominal speed of 3.40 GHz, Turbo Boost speed of 3.90 GHz, and 12 MB shared L3 cache. The series will be topped off with the Core i7-4960X Extreme Edition, featuring an unlocked BClk multiplier, 3.60 GHz nominal clock speed, 4.00 GHz Turbo Boost speed, and 15 MB shared L3 cache. The Ivy Bridge-E silicon will be built on the 22 nm silicon fab process, and TDP for all three parts is rated at 130W. The three will be released some time in Q3, 2013.
Source:
VR-Zone
The lineup will begin with Core i7-4820, a quad-core chip with a nominal clock speed of 3.70 GHz, Turbo Boost speed of 3.90 GHz, and 10 MB shared L3 cache. Moving on, there's the Core i7-4930K, a six-core chip with an unlocked BClk multiplier, nominal speed of 3.40 GHz, Turbo Boost speed of 3.90 GHz, and 12 MB shared L3 cache. The series will be topped off with the Core i7-4960X Extreme Edition, featuring an unlocked BClk multiplier, 3.60 GHz nominal clock speed, 4.00 GHz Turbo Boost speed, and 15 MB shared L3 cache. The Ivy Bridge-E silicon will be built on the 22 nm silicon fab process, and TDP for all three parts is rated at 130W. The three will be released some time in Q3, 2013.
52 Comments on Intel Core i7 "Ivy Bridge-E" HEDT Lineup Detailed
It's going to be just like LGA1366 and X58 chipset, which supported both 45nm "Bloomfield" and 32nm "Gulftown."
I have an off-topic question though, will my 1.5 year old Corsair H100 fit on LGA2011 with the stock backplates?
So why not releasing a fully unlocked and uncrippled 8-core version with the full 20MB cache enabled and rate it like 150W TDP (like its Xeon brothers) or even 170W TDP (whatever is neccesary)?!
The sandy bridge-e boards are the biggest letdown, with half-baked features and stuff that wasn't implemented at all. Like no Intel USB 3 ports which are on standard mainstream ivy boards.
So I would find it hard to believe that the mainstream ivy chipset will have better features than the highend board with a $600-$1000 CPU on it.
New boards will have to be coming.
2. The die shrink to ivy barely brought any improvements in multicore which only goes to make bulldozer appear less of a fail. Note that this has 6 cores and still rated at 130w, in other words they could've done that on sandy bridge e but they didnt just so they can milk every penny out of people. If you care so much about multithread do yourself a favor and wait till steamroller, that design should only make amds excellent multicore scaling even better that's before we consider any single core improvements, and im sure it will be at a fraction of the price for ivy bridge E
Intel is keeping the X79 chipset. The inclusion of a slightly higher frequency is nice, but too little to justify spending another $650 at launch.
So you've got a 22 nm process running the CPU. Let's look at the 65 nm running the PCH. 65-45-32-22. Four generations between the PCH and the CPU. No wonder the PCH only supports 2 SATA III and 4 SATA II ports. No wonder the USB options were cut down from the initial estimates. Intel gave up on this generation's enthusiast platform before the party began.
If I sound bitter, it's because Intel is dragging their feet. They want $500+ for a CPU. In turn, they give us technology that is more than half a decade old to run the PCH. Intel is giving their high-end customers the bird. Fine, just don't expect me to buy another high end chip any time soon.
What kind of sucker is going to touch these, if you already have Sandybridge E why would you bother to spend 500 to a grand for effectively nothing. Maybe a few updaters from x58 or earlier.
I have X58, I won't buy another until Haswell E and only then if the PCH has a minimum 6 Sata3slots and 6 USB3 ports.
If Haswell E hasn't materialized when my existing CPU/Board dies I will buy a Z87 and give INTEL high end the flick.
I will switch to AMD if they can produce something like a competitive product, they have great PCH's.
When Ivy hits 2011... Just think quad channel DDR3-3000+. Considering even the lower-binned Sandy Bridge E chips can run 2400+ no problem(making its IMC a little better than vanilla Sandy Bridge), it wouldn't be inconceivable that Ivy Bridge E's memory controller is a little better than vanilla Ivy Bridge's.
That being said, I'm just as disappointed as you guys that they're still offering 6c/12t as the top chip. I really don't want to have to go Xeon and have my OC capability crippled just so I can get those last 2c/4t. And I won't. Screw that.
I'm also worried they're not going to learn from vanilla Ivy Bridge and that they'll keep using that crappy thermal paste instead of soldering the die. I don't want to de-lid a $600-1000 processor to get acceptable temps.
Dont' really need 8-core CPU (and if I did there's always Xeons), but the platform calls to me.
For what its worth I have heard rumors of a Core i7 3980X with 8 cores / 16 threads. I know I doesn't make much sense and one would have to see it released in order to believe it,....
Just some random speculation!
Im waiting for a upgrade, I was about to buy I7 3820 and then upgrade to 8core IB-e but looks like there wont be 8core after all??
weird cause i saw some news about 8core not so long ago..
here: www.legitreviews.com/news/14815/
If this new slide is 10000% true, then im set for i7 4770K and OC that mofo to at least 5.2ghz
Anadtech said it will use new soldering not that bs like by IvyBridge, also unlocked base clock will kick some serious ass :D
@Mathragh
According to wiki apparently 10% faster by default, add better OC and it will be a worthy upgrade for older cpu users.
Performance
Compared to Ivy Bridge (expected):
- Twice the vector processing performance.
- At least 10% sequential CPU performance increase (8 execution ports per core versus 6).
- Up to double the performance of the integrated GPU. (Haswell GT3 vs Ivy Bridge HD4000)
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Haswell_%28microarchitecture%29These are crippled Xeons for the consumer 'enthusiast' market. They're priced for consumers, Xeons are much much more expensive. Intel is not going to sell a Xeon for cheap just because you want one... they would lose large amounts of money as the enterprise and workstation customers buy up all the cheap 8 cores for their servers.
and maybe this?
www.techpowerup.com/forums/showthread.php?t=182235
and at least 2 or 3 ... 4 would be cool, GTX 680s or whatever is out :rockout:
What do you do? browse the interwebs all day? yes for Facebook and Techpowerup a monster workstation with a few high end GPUs is a waste of power, but I still can bring even the most top of the line workstation to its knees and watch it flop :nutkick:
And I am not even talking about for gaming, though gaming will do it real quickly.