Sunday, November 7th 2021
Intel Core i5-12400F Allegedly Offers Ryzen 5 5600X Performance for 200 USD
Intel has recently released their first 12th Gen Core desktop processors with the 125 W TDP K-Series and they appear to be preparing to launch the mid-range 65 W TDP chips in the coming months. The i5-12400F is set to feature 6 cores and threads consisting entirely of high-performance cores without any efficiency cores as found in the existing lineup. The processor features a peak single-core clock speed of 4.4 GHz, while multi-core speeds are 4.0 GHz and 3.4 GHz at PL2 and PL1 power limits respectively. The chip features a 65 W TDP/PL1 power rating and an apparent Maximum Turbo Power PL2 value of 117 W.
This processor has reportedly been tested by French publication Comptoir Hardware where it consistently matched or surpassed the Ryzen 5 5600X in synthetic and gaming benchmarks. These benchmarks were run on Windows 11 with DDR5 memory running at an unspecified speed and an AMD Radeon RX 6900 XT GPU. We have recently seen a listing for the processor at a Canadian retailer which lists the i5-12400F for 249 CAD (200 USD) which if true would be a sizable jump from the 157 USD price of its predecessor but still significantly under the 280 USD Ryzen 5 5600X. The Intel Core i5-12400F is expected to be officially announced sometime in January 2022 possibly at CES 2022.
Sources:
Comptoir Hardware, @momomo_us
This processor has reportedly been tested by French publication Comptoir Hardware where it consistently matched or surpassed the Ryzen 5 5600X in synthetic and gaming benchmarks. These benchmarks were run on Windows 11 with DDR5 memory running at an unspecified speed and an AMD Radeon RX 6900 XT GPU. We have recently seen a listing for the processor at a Canadian retailer which lists the i5-12400F for 249 CAD (200 USD) which if true would be a sizable jump from the 157 USD price of its predecessor but still significantly under the 280 USD Ryzen 5 5600X. The Intel Core i5-12400F is expected to be officially announced sometime in January 2022 possibly at CES 2022.
39 Comments on Intel Core i5-12400F Allegedly Offers Ryzen 5 5600X Performance for 200 USD
Now Intel, do GPUs, so people have a reason to buy one.
One question though, it seems to me that AMD is always very conservative when it comes to power, can't they "unlock" their Zen3 to consume more power and deliver more performance? Or is there some limitation that forbids this?
That 12900K power consumption leak with 330W at 5.2GHz also had a follow-up that 5.3GHz took 400W (+70W for 100MHz) and 4.9GHz ran at 230W (+100W for 300MHz compared to 5.2GHz).
Zen3 (or rather TSMCs N7) has a similar problem but at a slightly lower clock speed.
I mean, sure, if you only look the performance charts, the 12900K sets score with the 5950X and even beats it on single core, but on the other hand, the 5950X is still limited to about 130W of power while the 12900K eats up almost 250W...
Pricing is of course another good viewpoint, but the plaing field is clearly not leveled. here. Just crank up a Ryzen to the same TDP levels where the Intel CPUs are and see the performance there for the buck.
If amd cranked up power people would bash them for so much power just to match intel performance.
On the other hand - thank you intel for bringing competition back and lower prices, now I can hopefully upgrade my am4 system for cheaper.
Well boo-hoo! What a trick to make a car with a few percent better performance while literally halving the mileage...
Yea, somthing I hoped for too. But still not sure if upgrade to 5600X or wait for Zen5 in 2023. Because no point in upgrading the CPU if I can't get a decent GPU at a non-scalper price. Not going to pay the same price I did for my Vega64 for a card that barely beats it 4 years later...
Overclocked out of the box to meet a grossly inefficient frequency target is just not beneficial, its that simple. It only serves to win benchmarks and marketing. You won't notice an advantage anywhere. And higher TDP is not easily cooled. Anything over 100-110W becomes heavy air cooling territory especially on a moderately warm day.
The monolithic design does help with having the hotspots in the center of the coldplate, though the der8auer and Arctic AIO offset mounts for AM4 help too.
The truth is painful to intel fanboys, yes performance is there but using twice as much watts? come on Intel you can do better than that, this is netburst all over hehe
The funny thing is that okay 200 usd 5600 performance but will have to use an aftermarket cooler that dissipates 300 watts and that is very expensive hehe, I wonder if a 360 aio can hold its own x 12400, pay attention that 12400 is the lowest of the lowest, so will still use 300 watts using only few cores ehhe
why intel, why intel, nooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo hehe