• Welcome to TechPowerUp Forums, Guest! Please check out our forum guidelines for info related to our community.

Intel Readies Xeon W3500 and W2500 "Sapphire Rapids Refresh" Series HEDT Processors

btarunr

Editor & Senior Moderator
Staff member
Joined
Oct 9, 2007
Messages
47,300 (7.53/day)
Location
Hyderabad, India
System Name RBMK-1000
Processor AMD Ryzen 7 5700G
Motherboard ASUS ROG Strix B450-E Gaming
Cooling DeepCool Gammax L240 V2
Memory 2x 8GB G.Skill Sniper X
Video Card(s) Palit GeForce RTX 2080 SUPER GameRock
Storage Western Digital Black NVMe 512GB
Display(s) BenQ 1440p 60 Hz 27-inch
Case Corsair Carbide 100R
Audio Device(s) ASUS SupremeFX S1220A
Power Supply Cooler Master MWE Gold 650W
Mouse ASUS ROG Strix Impact
Keyboard Gamdias Hermes E2
Software Windows 11 Pro
It turns out that the 60-core Xeon W9-3595X leak from last week is part of a 14-SKU mid-lifecycle refresh of the Xeon W LGA4677 series targeting the workstation and HEDT markets. The underlying microarchitecture and silicon at the heart of these is "Sapphire Rapids Refresh," it's essentially the same as "Sapphire Rapids," but with CPU core-count increases across the SKUs. If you recall, the "Sapphire Rapids" MCM has a maximum core-count of 60-core/120-thread which is maxed out in Xeon Scalable server processors, but only hit up to 56-core/112-thread with the original W3400 and W2400 series HEDT/workstation chips. This unused 4-core headroom, combined with increases in clock speeds, is how Intel plans to create these 14 SKUs across the new W3500 and W2500 product lines.

As with the original W3400 and W2400 series; what set the W3500 series chips apart from the W2500 series, is the I/O. The W3500 series gets 8-channel DDR5 memory and 128 PCIe Gen 5 lanes, while the W2500 series chips get 4-channel DDR5 memory and 64 PCIe Gen 5 lanes. As we mentioned, this refresh is all about increasing the CPU core counts at existing price points. The top W9-3595X is a 60-core/120-thread chip, compared to the 56-core/112-thread W9-3495X it's replacing. The new W9-3575X gets a massive 8-core uplift, and is now a 44-core/88-thread processor, compared to the 36-core/72-thread W9-3475X. The W7-3565X is 32-core/64-thread, compared to the 28-core/56-thread W7-3465X.



The W7-3555 and W7-3545 are 28-core/56-thread and 24-core/48-thread; coming in a price points comparable to the W7-3455 and W7-3445, which are 24-core/48-thread and 20-core/40-thread, respectively. At the "entry level," are the W5-3535X 20-core/40-thread replacing the W5-3435X that's a 16-core/32-thread chip; and the new W5-3525 that's a 16-core/32-thread chip succeeding the 12-core/24-thread 3425. Besides the CPU core count increases, each SKU gets a 100-200 MHz speed bump to step up their single-thread performance by a bit.

The story repeats with the new W2500 series, although the CPU core-count increases are just by 2 cores across the board; the series tops out at 26-core/52-thread, although we'd have loved to see a 30-core/60-thread part. Both the W2500 and W2400 series are based on a single-tile variant of "Sapphire Rapids" that physically contains 30 CPU cores, 56 MB of shared L3 cache, 4x DDR5 memory channels, and a 64-lane PCIe Gen 5 root.

The W2500 series lineup begins with the W3-2525 with a modest 8-core/16-thread count, compared to the 6-core/12-thread count of the W3-2423. Next up is the 10-core/20-thread W5-2535, compared to the 8-core/16-thread W5-2435. The W5-2545 is 12-core/24-thread, compared to the 10-core/20-thread W5-2445. The W5-2555X is a step up to 14-core/28-thread from the W5-2455X with its 12-core/24-thread count. A notch further up, we get the W5-2565X with its 18-core/36-thread CPU, compared to the 16-core/32-thread W5-2465X. At the top, we have the W7-2575X with 22-core/44-thread, which is a step up from the 20-core/40-thread W72475X; and finally the W7-2595X, with 26-core/52-thread on tap. Besides the 2-core increase across the board, there are similar 100-200 MHz speed bumps to the W3500 series.

View at TechPowerUp Main Site | Source
 
Joined
Mar 21, 2005
Messages
1,672 (0.23/day)
Location
Maribor, Slovenia, EU
System Name Core i9 rig / Lenovo laptop
Processor Core i9 10900X / Core i5 8350U
Motherboard Asus Prime X299 Edition 30 / Lenovo motherboard
Cooling Corsair H115i PRO RGB / stock cooler
Memory Gskill 4x8GB 3600mhz / 16GB 2400mhz
Video Card(s) Asus ROG Strix RTX 2080 Super / UHD 620
Storage Samsung SSD 970 PRO 1TB / Samsung OEM 256GB NVMe
Display(s) Dell UltraSharp UP3017 / Full HD IPS touch
Case Coolermaster mastercase H500M
Audio Device(s) Onboard sound
Power Supply Enermax Platimax 1700 watt / Lenovo 65watt power adapter
Mouse Logitech M500s
Keyboard Cherry
Software Windows 11 Pro / Windows 11 Pro
Any word on the price of these?
 
Joined
Jun 12, 2023
Messages
17 (0.03/day)
I still waiting on EMR as W sku. If this leak will be true and upcoming W2500/W3500 will be only updated SPR, so it's not a meaningful upgrade for current SPR owners like myself.
 
Last edited:
Joined
Oct 29, 2016
Messages
111 (0.04/day)
I thought EMR was supposed to have a lot more cache than SPR. This does not appear to be the case here.
 
Last edited:
Joined
Aug 24, 2023
Messages
30 (0.06/day)
System Name The Financial Mistake 2.0
Processor Intel Xeon w5-3435X 5.3GHz
Motherboard ASUS Pro WS W790E-SAGE-SE
Cooling Alphacool ES Jet 2U 4677, 2x480 Monsta + 1x360 Monsta / Phanteks T30 x22
Memory 4x16GB Kingston Fury Renegade Pro 7000MT/s CL32
Video Card(s) NVIDIA RTX 4090 FE
Storage 4x Samsung 990 Pro 2TB, Crucial P5 Plus 2TB
Display(s) ALIENWARE AW3423DWF
Case Caselabs TH10
Audio Device(s) Creative X3
Power Supply Corsair AX1600i
Mouse Elecom HUGE Trackball, ROG Chakram
Keyboard Mountain Everest Max
Benchmark Scores Time Spy Extreme: 19,874 Time Spy: 33,772
Wow, if this really is just a rebadge and 100Mhz increase over the current lineup then this is going to be the most DoA launch, SPR is already a tough sell and for us who already have it, if its not EMR there is basically zero reason to look at these
 
Joined
Nov 20, 2012
Messages
163 (0.04/day)
Wow, if this really is just a rebadge and 100Mhz increase over the current lineup then this is going to be the most DoA launch, SPR is already a tough sell and for us who already have it, if its not EMR there is basically zero reason to look at these
Read the article, it's +4 P-cores across the board.
 
Joined
Jun 12, 2023
Messages
17 (0.03/day)
Read the article, it's +4 P-cores across the board.
If I own now SPR (56 P Cores 112 Threads), so spending a lot of extra money after a few months for such a small difference is nonsense (same architecture 60 P Cores 120 Threads and clocks uplifted only about 100/200MHz). These processors cost the same as someone else's whole assembly including gpu. One thing that would make me start thinking about upgrading is EMR mainly because of the huge cache and updated arch. I'm guessing that almost every current SPR owner has it this way.

Wow, if this really is just a rebadge and 100Mhz increase over the current lineup then this is going to be the most DoA launch, SPR is already a tough sell and for us who already have it, if its not EMR there is basically zero reason to look at these
I fully agree.
 
Last edited:
Top