| higher than the new flagship model, the Core i9-13900K, compared to the previous Core i9-12900K (Alder Lake), especially in multi-threaded workloads.
After all, the new CPUs will benefit from some important changes , as the maximum number of cores, increased to 8P + 16E. Additionally, the P-cores have been upgraded with a higher IPC and L2 cache, while the E-cores feature a larger L2 cache. From a performance standpoint, Intel reported a 15% improvement in single-threaded workloads and up to 41% in multi-threaded workloads.
Recently, Intel released a new video, which currently it has been made private, in which the Core i9-13900K processor promised "unimaginable performance" thanks to its 8 P-cores and 16 E-cores (for a total of 24 cores and 32 threads) which will reach the remarkable operating frequency of 5 , 8GHz (from previous leaks, the chip should use 253W of power to maintain this clock).
Photo Credit: TweakTown A few weeks ago, we reported that an overclocker managed to bring an Engineering Sample of Core i9-13900K up to 8GHz using a liquid nitrogen cooling system with a voltage of 1,792V on a Z790 motherboard. For more information about it, we recommend reading our previous dedicated article.
After all, the new CPUs will benefit from some important changes , as the maximum number of cores, increased to 8P + 16E. Additionally, the P-cores have been upgraded with a higher IPC and L2 cache, while the E-cores feature a larger L2 cache. From a performance standpoint, Intel reported a 15% improvement in single-threaded workloads and up to 41% in multi-threaded workloads.
Recently, Intel released a new video, which currently it has been made private, in which the Core i9-13900K processor promised "unimaginable performance" thanks to its 8 P-cores and 16 E-cores (for a total of 24 cores and 32 threads) which will reach the remarkable operating frequency of 5 , 8GHz (from previous leaks, the chip should use 253W of power to maintain this clock).
Photo Credit: TweakTown A few weeks ago, we reported that an overclocker managed to bring an Engineering Sample of Core i9-13900K up to 8GHz using a liquid nitrogen cooling system with a voltage of 1,792V on a Z790 motherboard. For more information about it, we recommend reading our previous dedicated article.