Tuesday, May 27th 2014
Intel Core i7 "Haswell-E" Processor Lineup Detailed
Intel's next-generation Core i7 "Haswell-E" HEDT (high-end desktop) processor lineup, slated for later this year, accompanied by the company's X99 Express chipset, will launch at three price-points, predictably, succeeding the current Core i7-4820K, i7-4930K, and i7-4960X. The platform will herald a new LGA socket, which will have 2,011 pins, but will not be compatible with current LGA2011 platforms based on the X79 Express chipset. That's because "Haswell-E" will be among the first client platforms to support DDR4-SDRAM memory. All Haswell-E chips will support DDR4-2133 MHz out of the box.
Moving on to the actual lineup, and it begins with the Core i7-5820K. This is a six-core chip, and a welcome departure from Intel's sub-$400 HEDT chips being quad-core. Whether it supports HyperThreading, is not known. You still get 6 physical cores to plow through work. The chip also features a staggering 15 MB of L3 cache, clock speed of 3.30 GHz with a couple of notches of Turbo Boost, and a quad-channel DDR4 integrated memory controller. Oh, and there's the unlocked BClk multiplier. Sounds too good to be true for a sub-$400 chip? Here's the catch - its on-die PCI-Express Gen 3.0 root complex will have fewer lanes. It can spare just 16 + 8 lanes for discrete graphics cards. For boards with three long x16 slots, that would mean x16/NC/x8, or x8/x8/x8, with an additional x4 link.
Next up, is Intel's $600-ish Haswell-E HEDT chip, the Core i7-5930K. Like the i7-5820K, this is a six-core chip, but could feature HyperThreading. It has the same 15 MB L3 cache, and quad-channel DDR4 IMC. It offers higher clock speeds, of 3.50 GHz. Unlike the i7-5820K, it features a full-fledged PCIe root complex, giving out two x16 links, and one x8 link. This would be ideal for 4-GPU setups in which the two x16 links split up as x8/x8/x8/x8, with a fifth long slot still having an x8 link, to drive high-bandwidth SSDs.
Leading the pack, at a four-figure price, will be the Core i7-5960X. This is an eight-core chip with HyperThreading, enabling 16 logical CPUs. The eight cores are cushioned by a massive 20 MB L3 cache. The chip runs at lower clock speeds than its smaller siblings, at 3.00 GHz, and features the same 40-lane PCI-Express root complex as the i7-5930K.
All three chips feature TDP rated at 140W.
Source:
Coolaler
Moving on to the actual lineup, and it begins with the Core i7-5820K. This is a six-core chip, and a welcome departure from Intel's sub-$400 HEDT chips being quad-core. Whether it supports HyperThreading, is not known. You still get 6 physical cores to plow through work. The chip also features a staggering 15 MB of L3 cache, clock speed of 3.30 GHz with a couple of notches of Turbo Boost, and a quad-channel DDR4 integrated memory controller. Oh, and there's the unlocked BClk multiplier. Sounds too good to be true for a sub-$400 chip? Here's the catch - its on-die PCI-Express Gen 3.0 root complex will have fewer lanes. It can spare just 16 + 8 lanes for discrete graphics cards. For boards with three long x16 slots, that would mean x16/NC/x8, or x8/x8/x8, with an additional x4 link.
Next up, is Intel's $600-ish Haswell-E HEDT chip, the Core i7-5930K. Like the i7-5820K, this is a six-core chip, but could feature HyperThreading. It has the same 15 MB L3 cache, and quad-channel DDR4 IMC. It offers higher clock speeds, of 3.50 GHz. Unlike the i7-5820K, it features a full-fledged PCIe root complex, giving out two x16 links, and one x8 link. This would be ideal for 4-GPU setups in which the two x16 links split up as x8/x8/x8/x8, with a fifth long slot still having an x8 link, to drive high-bandwidth SSDs.
Leading the pack, at a four-figure price, will be the Core i7-5960X. This is an eight-core chip with HyperThreading, enabling 16 logical CPUs. The eight cores are cushioned by a massive 20 MB L3 cache. The chip runs at lower clock speeds than its smaller siblings, at 3.00 GHz, and features the same 40-lane PCI-Express root complex as the i7-5930K.
All three chips feature TDP rated at 140W.
58 Comments on Intel Core i7 "Haswell-E" Processor Lineup Detailed
Real question: How legitimate do you really think the source is? Also no ECC support? That's weird for HEDT.
Most HEDT platforms of the past don't support ECC, that's usually reserved for the Xeon platforms.
It looks like an expensive platform, we cant even use our old memory anymore and no doubt DDR4 will be expensive at first. Well, hopefully the performance is there, I'm prepared to pay if the performance is there.
I know what you mean though, not that most consumers needs that kind of multithreaded power.
Before that we had
x930K HT + non crippled PCIe + abit more cache + 2 more cores comparing with x820K
x820K HT + non crippled PCIe
Now x930K will have same cores ammount and so that people would still buy it over x820K they'll cripple x820K beyond the belief taking out HT? *uck you Intel!
So we don't have $600 8 core + HT chip and $400 6 core + HT, there is no point to touch this overpriced $1000 CPU to have real 8 cores and no point to upgrade the lesser ones.
I'm all the time saying that YOU should be very careful what you are buying not to cause monopoly.
The same would happen if you continue to buy nvidia videocards and make AMD even weaker. No one will benefit in the long term.
Seriously, I'm more curious than anything about how well MSFT Flight Simulators 9 & 10 will run. I probably won't notice anything more than an increase in frames over my current overclocked 4770K. I was a private pilot for 35 years until I failed the physical. Now the PC is the only thing I can fly, so there lies my passion and my obsession to see if each new PC generation can make things just a little bit better.
I'm planning to build a Z97/4970K system next month (or whenever) and when the Haswell-Es come out, my existing 4770K rig will be handed down to our one of our seven grandkids.
:toast: @ Romeg hope to still be doing the same thing when i'm your ag.... level of life experience.
I'll wait until we get up to 8 or 10 cores
Did you even read the OP?
Not paying 1k for a 8core X
when the next line up will have K with 8 or 10 cores
The mid level having fewer cores then the high-end wasn't entirely unexpected IMO since I was expecting anywhere from (entry level, mid, high-end) (4/8, 6/12, 8/16) (6/12, 8/16, 8/16) (6/12, 6/12, 8/16).
Currently I have an Intel Core i7 3930K which IMO is a great chip that has served me well for years. The mid level would be what I would typically buy but this time around the entry level is catching my interest if it is a 6 core 12 thread part at ~$300 USD.
I hear the speculation that the entry level Haswell-E Core i7 5820K wouldn't have HT but that seems a little over the top coupled with the PCIe limitations IMO. Without HT the Haswell-E Core i7 5820K should be named "Core i5 5820K. Cutting the PCIe lanes is going too far but cutting the PCIe lanes and removing HT is really going way, way, wayyyyyy too far. So I am skeptical of this.
More PCIe lanes is the one thing that many mainstream users would step up to a HED for but since these same people often settle for less in the mainstream its not necessarily like they are losing anything if they go for a Haswell-E Core i7 5820K Controlling / limiting monopolies is the the domain of a governing body. Its not the job of individual citizens.
You want a 5770K with 10 cores, 20 threads. :) For $350. :)
The thing is this. Whenever a new lineup comes out like this everyone has eyes for the highest end option but few are willing to pay for it. As things change and the tech they wanted becomes more affordable a new lineup comes out and expectations change. People lose sight of that cheap 6 core processor they wanted when they first heard about Gulftown 970, 980X and Sandy Bridge-E and then move their sights to new unattainable,.....