Wednesday, September 12th 2018
More Clarity on 9th Gen Core Processor Pricing Emerges
Intel is debuting its first wave of 9th generation Core desktop processors with three models later this year - the 6-core/6-thread Core i5-9600K, the 8-core/8-thread Core i7-9700K, and the 8-core/16-thread Core i9-9900K. We've been very curious about how the entry of the Core i9 extension to the mainstream-desktop LGA1151 platform would affect pricing of the Core i5 and Core i7 K-series SKUs, especially given that the i7-9700K is the first Core i7 SKU in a decade to lack HyperThreading. An updated catalog by a major Singapore-based PC components distributor adds more clarity.
Singapore-based PC component distributor BizGram, in its latest catalog, disclosed the all-inclusive retail prices of the three new processors. As Redditor Dylan522p suggests, if you do the SGD-USD conversion and subtract all taxes, you get ominous-looking SEP prices for the three. Intel could price the Core i5-9600K at USD $249.99. The Core i7-9700K could be priced at $349.99. The flagship Core i9-9900K could go for $449.99. These seem like highly plausible pre-tax launch prices for the three chips, and fit into the competitive landscape.At $250, the Core i5-9600K could blunt the slight price-performance edge the Ryzen 5 2600X has over the current i5-8600K, with its 2-3% performance increment. An early review of the Core i7-9700K is already out, which suggests that it could emerge the ultimate gaming CPU, with multi-threaded performance trading blows with the Ryzen 7 2700X. The Core i9-9900K could entice enthusiasts and quasi pro-sumers with its 16 MB L3 cache and 16-thread multi-threaded advantage. Given that AMD sought $499 for the Ryzen 7 1800X at launch, $450 seems only fair.
Source:
BizGram
Singapore-based PC component distributor BizGram, in its latest catalog, disclosed the all-inclusive retail prices of the three new processors. As Redditor Dylan522p suggests, if you do the SGD-USD conversion and subtract all taxes, you get ominous-looking SEP prices for the three. Intel could price the Core i5-9600K at USD $249.99. The Core i7-9700K could be priced at $349.99. The flagship Core i9-9900K could go for $449.99. These seem like highly plausible pre-tax launch prices for the three chips, and fit into the competitive landscape.At $250, the Core i5-9600K could blunt the slight price-performance edge the Ryzen 5 2600X has over the current i5-8600K, with its 2-3% performance increment. An early review of the Core i7-9700K is already out, which suggests that it could emerge the ultimate gaming CPU, with multi-threaded performance trading blows with the Ryzen 7 2700X. The Core i9-9900K could entice enthusiasts and quasi pro-sumers with its 16 MB L3 cache and 16-thread multi-threaded advantage. Given that AMD sought $499 for the Ryzen 7 1800X at launch, $450 seems only fair.
147 Comments on More Clarity on 9th Gen Core Processor Pricing Emerges
8700K performs better in 9 out of 10 games with HT disabled. In the last game it's a draw.
HT off means higher OC / lower temp.
HT does nothing for gaming unless core count is too low and 8 cores at 5 GHz or more is going to rip thru games for years to come.
If you don't believe this, go search YouTube, plenty of proof. Performs drops with HT enabled.
Same things happends with Ryzen when SMT is enabled.
Also, HT has Foreshadow bug. So for mainly gaming, I don't see the reason to get the i9.
Lastly, why would you get 2080 Ti? 12nm ripoff with full RTX focus (yet too weak to run games with RTX anyway).
Nvidia could easily have used 7nm but went the milking route. Yeah I'll keep my 1080 Ti till 7nm hits.
Early Ryzen adoptors were guinea pigs. Memory comp sucked bigtime. People bought crap memory, found out later that they needed Samsung B-die chips to get reasonable performance. Sadly these kits are 50% more expensive. Ryzen without Samsung B-die is meh. Needs at least 3200/C14.
Please don't compare AMD cores with Intel cores 1:1 - AMD cores are inferior. This is why AMD needs more to deliver same perf. Sad but true. Maybe Zen 2 at 7nm will bring 4.5 GHz to Ryzen.
Are you seriously using FX6300? Then please don't talk bad about Intel 4 cores.
I also need 16 threads in order to faster encode the movies for the PS4, because the internal player is so retarded and useless, it can only play very limited type of video/audio files.
9th gen is going to be good. The soldered chips atleast.
I just hope Intel sticks to solder on all future K-models.