It will also set it alight.
It will also set it alight.
We know. This has been discussed at length.Zen 5 I think is a 2024H1 product. Availability possibly only in Q2 2024.
The 7950X it s ahead of a 13900K, and even of a 13900KS using an AIO...
Default behavior for a 7950X if you install it into any X670E or B650E motherboard is to run 230W and 95 C. They'll both technically set things alight.It will also set it alight.
That's a bold claim going by a single source that shows it winning by 1% in multithread performance while losing by 10% in single thread performance. There's other sources that compare the processors such as TPU. For multithreading performance it's close enough in raw performance that it depends on the workload and overall they're effectively tied.The 7950X it s ahead of a 13900K, and even of a 13900KS using an AIO...
Default behavior for a 7950X if you install it into any X670E or B650E motherboard is to run 230W and 95 C. They'll both technically set things alight.
That's a bold claim going by a single source that shows it winning by 1% in multithread performance while losing by 10% in single thread performance. There's other sources that compare the processors such as TPU. For multithreading performance it's close enough in raw performance that it depends on the workload and overall they're effectively tied.
Yeah, till Zen5 comes out.14900K is going to hold the performance crown for the next 6 months at least.
Yes, we know that 192EU GPU tile was cancelled.
However, Intel could be planning MTL products for...
GT1 => 32EU ( Does MTL-S exist? )
GT2 => 64EU
GT3 => 128EU
Is it?
No, it doesn’t. It’ll run to 230W assuming it’s not thermally limited. Multiple reviewers show it pushing 230W in cinebench and blender. Furthermore, I owned a 7950X and with my EK 360 AIO it’d hit 230W in benchmarks that had 100% utilization across all 16 cores. The 7950X PPT is 230W at 160A.Intel manage to keep up thanks to vaster amounts of power.
Their power management is such that the 13900K FI manage to stick to 253W whatever the MT load.
AMD s on the other hand has a losely implemented algorithm, FI the 7950X use 205W in Cinebench and no more than 189W in Handbrake, all softs where RPL is always at full tilt power wise.
At the end it s an out of the box overclocked to the max SKU, and next Intel CPUs dont seem to moderate this orgy of power comsumption.
No it's 64EU for GT1 and 128EU for GT2. Desktop would have got GT1 with 64EUs.
No one cares this is not AMD thread, and no 7950x do not work on 140 wats, and even if you set it, you can do same to 14900kIf you care about efficiency the 7950x. At ~140 watt, its awesome.
No, it doesn’t. It’ll run to 230W assuming it’s not thermally limited. Multiple reviewers show it pushing 230W in cinebench and blender. Furthermore, I owned a 7950X and with my EK 360 AIO it’d hit 230W in benchmarks that had 100% utilization across all 16 cores. The 7950X PPT is 230W at 160A.
And how many people have access to white phosphorus or carbon disulfide?Default behavior for a 7950X if you install it into any X670E or B650E motherboard is to run 230W and 95 C. They'll both technically set things alight.
I’m not sure what you mean. What I described is the typical behavior for majority of people who buy a 7950X.And how many people have access to white phosphorus or carbon disulfide?
I’m going by TPU, GamersNexus, Hardware Unboxed, Tom’s Hardware and I’m sure others (that’s all I bothered checking). In the case of GamersNexus they measured power consumption at the EPS and got 250W and 295W in a blender workload for the 7950X and 13900K respectively. You’re quoting me a single source that probably didn’t have adequate hardware for cooling.That s wrong, it s temp limited to 95°C whatever the power in use, if it reach 95°C it will limit the power even if the full TDP is not exhausted, take a look at Computerbase review, they measure 205W in CB and they stated that they couldnt overclock the chip unless they unervolt it to reduce power and hence temperature.
FTR they measured 205W in CB, 189W in Handbrake H264 and 195W in Prime 95. Beside if it was to use 230W in CB FI then a full system would consume just 30W more than a full system 13900K, yet 7950X full system use 320W while the 13900K system is at 394W, that s 74W difference at the main, and accounting for the PSU + VRM losses that make a 55-60W difference at the CPU level, so since the 13900K is at 253W that put the 7950X at 200W.
The numbers are all on the link i posted, you re just relying on hear say rather than on professionaly made measurement, here it is again, look at the graph "leistungsaufname", there s CB and Prime 95 for power comsumption.
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Intel Core i9-13900KS mit 6,0 GHz im Test
Der Core i9-13900KS ist der erste Intel-Prozessor mit bis zu 6,0 GHz ab Werk. Die dritte Special Edition in Anwendungen und Spielen im Test.www.computerbase.de
Tjmax is 100 C, it will throttle to prevent exceeding that temperature. The 13900K also has less heat density and a more efficient IHS so it’s capable of running more power so it’s not apples to apples.On the other hand RPL will gladly reach and even surpass 100 °C, that s why it can be brought to 253W.
I’m not sure what you mean. What I described is the typical behavior for majority of people who buy a 7950X.
I’m going by TPU, GamersNexus, Hardware Unboxed, Tom’s Hardware and I’m sure others (that’s all I bothered checking). In the case of GamersNexus they measured power consumption at the EPS and got 250W and 295W in a blender workload for the 7950X and 13900K respectively. You’re quoting me a single source that probably didn’t have adequate hardware for cooling.
Tjmax is 100 C, it will throttle to prevent exceeding that temperature. The 13900K also has less heat density and a more efficient IHS so it’s capable of running more power so it’s not apples to apples.
Power efficiency isn’t a single number, it’s a curve. Your own source shows the 7950X having a 12% performance advantage when both are limited to 142W. That’s assuming those numbers are accurate and include the 7950X’s SOC power (they usually don’t). So yeah? Roughly 10% better perf/watt.Think about it, if the 7950X was using 230W to match a 253W CPU then it would mean that it has only 10% better perf/watt, wich is the myth that people like you believe, numbers say otherwise when they are measurement made by competent people, the sites you cited dont know jack, there s one of them that use peak power as "measurement", wich is total non sense.
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Intel Core i9-13900KS mit 6,0 GHz im Test
Der Core i9-13900KS ist der erste Intel-Prozessor mit bis zu 6,0 GHz ab Werk. Die dritte Special Edition in Anwendungen und Spielen im Test.www.computerbase.de
Power efficiency isn’t a single number, it’s a curve. Your own source shows the 7950X having a 12% performance advantage when both are limited to 142W. That’s assuming those numbers are accurate and include the 7950X’s SOC power (they usually don’t). So yeah? Roughly 10% better perf/watt.
That’s literally what it shows. You can manipulate it and twist it by selecting certain points on the efficiency curve that suit your argument but when both are power limited to 142W it shows a 10% performance advantage over the 13900KS and an 11% performance advantage over the 13900K.Not at all, read that to match a 142W 7950X, that is, at isoperf, the 13900K require 200W or so, so that s 40% better perf watt at isoperf.
That being said ARL is supposed to score 15-20% better than a 13900K at 250W, that is , at iso power, at isoperf it should require something like 200W, so it should more or less match a 7950X perf/watt at isoperf but the contender in 2024 will not be Zen 4.
Lunar lake is the big one from insider sources will beat apple in all stacks... beating apple in power efficiency is the goal for intel.. apple are undisputed in performance per watt on laptopWell, it looks like 2023 is the first time in many years Intel is going to have a comfortable lead both in desktop cpu performance and laptop power-efficiency. Next 6 months is gonna be very interesting for Intel...
8 more days to go...
That’s literally what it shows. You can manipulate it and twist it by selecting certain points on the efficiency curve that suit your argument but when both are power limited to 142W it shows a 10% performance advantage over the 13900KS and an 11% performance advantage over the 13900K.
To prove the point, your data shows the 13700K at 142W outperforming the 12900KS at 241W! Same core counts and everything. I guess RPL improved efficiency by 70% in a single generation!
Alternatively, at iso-power (125W) the 13700K has 7% more performance than the 12900K.
Which one of those seems like a more realistic assessment?