Are your information updated?
TSMC has already scaled up its 7nm process output to 130,000 wafers monthly ahead of schedule, with the monthly production set to climb further to 140,000 units at the end of this year, according to industry sources.
www.digitimes.com
TSMC 7nm process output to top 140,000 wafers monthly
And what you have got in Wikipedia, is using the source in year 2013. No wonder there is no 7nm capacity.
en.wikipedia.org
So lets recap this:
I said : "
They [Intel] probably have more 10nm capacity than TSMC has 7nm capacity."
This simple comment seems to be beyond your ability to comprehend or deal with at some level.
So you stated that TSMC had multiple gigafabs that can make > 100,000 wafers per month, implying that they could make ~500K+
7nm wafers per month. That was easily debunked as that is (maybe) total capacity of those fabs, not their 7nm capacity.
You clearly were not aware that a chip plant has multiple fab nodes. See previous post.
So now you are saying something different, that TSMC has
140,000 wafers per month capacity on 7nm total, after expansion in late 2020?
Well at least you're learning to use the internet to get facts. It might interest you that I long ago read that article.
So here are some facts you might have found had you bothered to check the other side of the equation.
Intel does not give us direct numbers like that for their capacity, but we do know what their overall capacity is and how many fabs they have, and which ones can make 10nm. We also know that when Intel converts a fab, they convert the whole thing, that's why the Oregon fab can make 10 and 14nm on all nodes. Two nodes can make 22nm, and two others are being upgraded to do 7nm. With the exception of a couple of older fabs (which do 65nm / 32nm for legacy spares) that is the Intel way.
Intel has 15 fabs. They have about 890,000 wafer starts per month total. This means the average fab has 890,000 / 15 = 59133 wafer starts per month. 3 of their fabs are 10nm.
3 10nm fabs x 59133 wafers / month = 177,400 wafers / month.
177,400 > 140,000
Except, Fab 42, is 10nm and is by far their largest fab. So they can probably make more than that. Anyway, I used the word probably, and all available data backs that up.
So are you now informed?
And what you have got in Wikipedia, is using the source in year 2013. No wonder there is no 7nm capacity.
en.wikipedia.org
There are 387 references there. Many are from 2020. How on earth you zeroed in on just the first reference is a mystery.