Here are some benches from my 13900K with E cores and P cores set to 4.3GHz.
Cinebench R23
MT
8P with Hyperthreading - 17,525 (94W package)
16E (1 P @0.8GHz) - 18,157 (120W package)
ST
P - 1614
E - 1169
Handbrake bench from our forums
8P with Hyperthreading - 230.47 sec/7.84fps
16E (1 P @0.8GHz) - 219.45 sec/8.23fps
CPUmark99 - Yes old and outdated but the result is curious
P - 683
E - 722
Perhaps something to do with Gracemont's 17 vs. Raptor Coves 12 execution ports on this old single threaded integer benchmark?
For highly threaded applications like Handbrake (x265) and Cinebench rendering, 16E's have about the throughput (IPC) of 8P's. The P's are more energy efficient and can of course clock higher. The E's are more area efficient.
CB ST shows Raptor to have 38% better IPC than Gracemont. Of course Raptor loses it's HT capability here.
CB MT shows Raptor having 93% better IPC than Gracemont with Raptors HT in operation.
As for compute/area, let's assume 8.08mm^2 for one P including L2 and 10.28mm^2 for 1 E cluster with L2
Using CB R23MT at ISO frequencies we find that Raptor Cove generates 271 Cinebench MT points per square mm while Gracemont generates 442 Cinebench MT points per square mm. At ISO frequencies Gracemont provides 63% more compute with Cinebench for a given area. Of course some of this advantage is reduced when Raptor Cove is run at full frequency but the case for Gracemont's area efficiency is significant.
In terms of E and P "balancing" the 13900K is tilted a bit toward the P's. When you take the higher clocks of the P's into account, when using well threaded applications an 8+20 (or perhaps 24) part would provide a pretty even balance of E and P computer. Not that that metric means anything, I just find it interesting.
Cinebench R23
MT
8P with Hyperthreading - 17,525 (94W package)
16E (1 P @0.8GHz) - 18,157 (120W package)
ST
P - 1614
E - 1169
Handbrake bench from our forums
8P with Hyperthreading - 230.47 sec/7.84fps
16E (1 P @0.8GHz) - 219.45 sec/8.23fps
CPUmark99 - Yes old and outdated but the result is curious
P - 683
E - 722
Perhaps something to do with Gracemont's 17 vs. Raptor Coves 12 execution ports on this old single threaded integer benchmark?
For highly threaded applications like Handbrake (x265) and Cinebench rendering, 16E's have about the throughput (IPC) of 8P's. The P's are more energy efficient and can of course clock higher. The E's are more area efficient.
CB ST shows Raptor to have 38% better IPC than Gracemont. Of course Raptor loses it's HT capability here.
CB MT shows Raptor having 93% better IPC than Gracemont with Raptors HT in operation.
As for compute/area, let's assume 8.08mm^2 for one P including L2 and 10.28mm^2 for 1 E cluster with L2
Using CB R23MT at ISO frequencies we find that Raptor Cove generates 271 Cinebench MT points per square mm while Gracemont generates 442 Cinebench MT points per square mm. At ISO frequencies Gracemont provides 63% more compute with Cinebench for a given area. Of course some of this advantage is reduced when Raptor Cove is run at full frequency but the case for Gracemont's area efficiency is significant.
In terms of E and P "balancing" the 13900K is tilted a bit toward the P's. When you take the higher clocks of the P's into account, when using well threaded applications an 8+20 (or perhaps 24) part would provide a pretty even balance of E and P computer. Not that that metric means anything, I just find it interesting.