The newest leak from X (formerly Twitter) has detailed five Intel Granite Rapids SKUs, including the 6980P, 6979P, 6972P, 6952P, and the 6960P. Featuring up to 128 CPU cores and up to 504 MB of cache, these show that Intel Granite Rapids will double the amount of cores compared to the Emerald Rapids SKUs.
The newest leak coming from Jaykihn over at X, following the previous leak that detailed the most powerful SKU. The 6980P will pack 128 cores, pack 504 MB of cache, have a 2.0 GHz base frequency and a massive 500 W TDP rating. The rest of the SKUs have lower core count, ending with the 6960P, which comes with 72 cores, 432 MB of cache, but also a higher 2.7 GHz base frequency.
In case you missed it, Intel Granite Rapids is the next-generation performance-oriented server architecture expected to launch alongside Sierra Forest server chips, with both sharing the same new Xeon 6 branding. While Sierra Forest will be designed entirely with efficiency cores (E-cores), Intel Granite Ridge will feature Redwood Cove performance cores (P-cores), bringing more L1 cache, higher IPC performance, support for the MXFP4 data format, and promising some impressive performance improvements for compute intensive and AI workloads. According to Intel, Granite Rapids should provide up to 2x to 3x higher performance improvement and up to 2.8x higher memory bandwidth.
So far, Granite Rapids is expected to launch in Q3 this year, with more higher-end SKUs coming in early 2025.
View at TechPowerUp Main Site | Source
The newest leak coming from Jaykihn over at X, following the previous leak that detailed the most powerful SKU. The 6980P will pack 128 cores, pack 504 MB of cache, have a 2.0 GHz base frequency and a massive 500 W TDP rating. The rest of the SKUs have lower core count, ending with the 6960P, which comes with 72 cores, 432 MB of cache, but also a higher 2.7 GHz base frequency.
In case you missed it, Intel Granite Rapids is the next-generation performance-oriented server architecture expected to launch alongside Sierra Forest server chips, with both sharing the same new Xeon 6 branding. While Sierra Forest will be designed entirely with efficiency cores (E-cores), Intel Granite Ridge will feature Redwood Cove performance cores (P-cores), bringing more L1 cache, higher IPC performance, support for the MXFP4 data format, and promising some impressive performance improvements for compute intensive and AI workloads. According to Intel, Granite Rapids should provide up to 2x to 3x higher performance improvement and up to 2.8x higher memory bandwidth.
So far, Granite Rapids is expected to launch in Q3 this year, with more higher-end SKUs coming in early 2025.
View at TechPowerUp Main Site | Source