Friday, September 22nd 2023
Intel Core i9-14900KF Tops PassMark Single-Core Rankings
The 14th Gen Core "Raptor Lake Refresh" desktop CPU lineup was not showcased during Intel Innovation's keynote presentation—instead, upcoming Meteor Lake and Lunar Lake generations were put in the spotlight. We will likely have to wait for an official announcement closer to the expected October 17 launch date of K and KF SKUs. The Core i9-14900KF model has emerged once again, thanks to benchmark results hitting the 'net—Passmark's owner, David Wren, declared on social media: "Yet another high-end CPU has made a significant debut on the single-threaded chart today! While it's not available for purchase yet, the Intel 4th Gen i9-14900KF CPU has claimed the top spot on the chart."
The benched Core i9-14900KF scored 4939 points in PassMark's single-thread test, which surpasses equivalent 13th gen heavyweights: Core i9-13900KS—4769 points and Core i9-13900K—4666 points. Intel's iGPU-less flagship desktop processor now sits at the top of Passmark's single-thread rating table. VideoCardz noted: "It's worth mentioning that the i9-13900KS also boasts a 6.0 GHz clock speed, and the 14900KF achieved this score using relatively modest DDR5-5600 memory." Multi-threaded performance is a tad disappointing—this 14900KF sits about level with the 13900K with an extremely narrow 0.6% difference.
Sources:
VideoCardz, TechRadar, Passmark Entry
The benched Core i9-14900KF scored 4939 points in PassMark's single-thread test, which surpasses equivalent 13th gen heavyweights: Core i9-13900KS—4769 points and Core i9-13900K—4666 points. Intel's iGPU-less flagship desktop processor now sits at the top of Passmark's single-thread rating table. VideoCardz noted: "It's worth mentioning that the i9-13900KS also boasts a 6.0 GHz clock speed, and the 14900KF achieved this score using relatively modest DDR5-5600 memory." Multi-threaded performance is a tad disappointing—this 14900KF sits about level with the 13900K with an extremely narrow 0.6% difference.
28 Comments on Intel Core i9-14900KF Tops PassMark Single-Core Rankings
www.cpubenchmark.net/cpu.php?cpu=Intel+Core+i9-14900KF&id=5684 This singular sample was - obviously and unsurprisingly - overclocked.
www.passmark.com/baselines/V11/display.php?id=190877351015
Both the Core i5 and Core i9 segments are at 1:1 with their 13th Gen counterparts (with the i9 having a very mild clock speed bump to match the 13900KS but with a lower default PL, expect it to lose a tiny bit in a 1:1 by the books stock configuration), aka no changes, no improvements, expect nothing from these, not even the base frequencies have been increased, maybe a 100 MHz lower or higher there, but effectively they are identical - Intel will likely simply retire the 13th Gen branding and begin shipping the chips as 14th Gen instead. Same product, same capabilities, same performance, new name. The supposedly increased, native DDR5-6400 support fluked and Intel isn't claiming that, it's still 5600 official and the CPUs will probably hit the exact same clock frequency ranges of the 13th gen on the same motherboards.
This leaves only and exclusively the Core i7 to keep an eye on, as it's getting the extra E-core cluster and associated cache. It's a tremendously disappointing "generation", if anything, the brainiacs at Intel's marketing should have released these as 13605K/13905K and for the i7, perhaps exclusively, i7-13750K - that's what they are. It's so bad that anyone who has a 13900K can't even feel any sort of FOMO, there's literally nothing new, DLVR is also nowhere to be seen in any leaks thus far.
This "generation"/refresh is every bit as insignificant as Comet Lake Refresh was, and they released that only to the Core i3 segment (eg. i3-10105). We'll see more in the coming weeks but, I suspect low profile/low key launch with next to no fanfare and quiet, but straight replacements in retailers soon to follow.
i'm not even commenting on a sense of investment in lga1700 considering alternatives
Also you will be investing in a dead platform because the next will be a new socket.....
Intel with CPU like 13700KF still manage very correct consumption in idle and most games, which is impressive, but I really feel that they went berserk on the wattage in order to rival Ryzen in high-stress loads and heavy gaming.
Very curious to see if it will be the case for meteor lake, it's a brand new architecture and node.
If I had a 12th+ I would never upgrade to 14th gen but wait for that whole new architecture right around the corner.