Discussion Intel Meteor, Arrow, Lunar & Panther Lakes + WCL Discussion Threads

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Tigerick

Senior member
Apr 1, 2022
942
857
106
Wildcat Lake (WCL) Specs

Intel Wildcat Lake (WCL) is upcoming mobile SoC replacing Raptor Lake-U. WCL consists of 2 tiles: compute tile and PCD tile. It is true single die consists of CPU, GPU and NPU that is fabbed by 18-A process. Last time I checked, PCD tile is fabbed by TSMC N6 process. They are connected through UCIe, not D2D; a first from Intel. Expecting launching in Q1 2026.

Intel Raptor Lake UIntel Wildcat Lake 15W?Intel Lunar LakeIntel Panther Lake 4+0+4
Launch DateQ1-2024Q2-2026Q3-2024Q1-2026
ModelIntel 150UIntel Core 7Core Ultra 7 268VCore Ultra 7 365
Dies2223
NodeIntel 7 + ?Intel 18-A + TSMC N6TSMC N3B + N6Intel 18-A + Intel 3 + TSMC N6
CPU2 P-core + 8 E-cores2 P-core + 4 LP E-cores4 P-core + 4 LP E-cores4 P-core + 4 LP E-cores
Threads12688
Max Clock5.4 GHz?5 GHz4.8 GHz
L3 Cache12 MB12 MB12 MB
TDP15 - 55 W15 W ?17 - 37 W25 - 55 W
Memory128-bit LPDDR5-520064-bit LPDDR5128-bit LPDDR5x-8533128-bit LPDDR5x-7467
Size96 GB32 GB128 GB
Bandwidth136 GB/s
GPUIntel GraphicsIntel GraphicsArc 140VIntel Graphics
RTNoNoYESYES
EU / Xe96 EU2 Xe8 Xe4 Xe
Max Clock1.3 GHz?2 GHz2.5 GHz
NPUGNA 3.018 TOPS48 TOPS49 TOPS






PPT1.jpg
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As Hot Chips 34 starting this week, Intel will unveil technical information of upcoming Meteor Lake (MTL) and Arrow Lake (ARL), new generation platform after Raptor Lake. Both MTL and ARL represent new direction which Intel will move to multiple chiplets and combine as one SoC platform.

MTL also represents new compute tile that based on Intel 4 process which is based on EUV lithography, a first from Intel. Intel expects to ship MTL mobile SoC in 2023.

ARL will come after MTL so Intel should be shipping it in 2024, that is what Intel roadmap is telling us. ARL compute tile will be manufactured by Intel 20A process, a first from Intel to use GAA transistors called RibbonFET.



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Last edited:

MoistOintment

Member
Jul 31, 2024
158
252
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I predicted PTL is gonna be very expensive. Market proved that It is very expensive, and often even more than faster competition, Halo.

MLID agrees both with me and the market.

The market is not fluff, it is reality.
MLID isn't enough of a source on his own.

Is PTL-H 12Xe expensive? Sure. How expensive is it, relative to the competition? And how does this SoC price difference impact the end product when factoring in the increased cost of Ram and SSD? Is it $50/SoC more than Gorgon Point? $20? $100?

You're working backwards by trying to determine the SoC's price based on the launch prices of ultra-premium thin and lights launching with new MSRP's in a DRAM shortage vs discounted models from last year. You can't isolate the SoC pricing based on these handful of laptop model's launch prices.

When 2026 Gorgon Point and Gorgon Halo laptops launch with updated MSRPs impacted by RAM and SSD price increases, what will your reasoning be then? And will you isolate true competitor laptops? Or will you find some chunky plastic laptop with fat bezels, bad speakers, and poor battery life and compare it to a brand new thin and light constructed with a metal chassis that has a tandem OLED screen and draw price conclusions from that?

Unless you can provide some kind of price comparison, even some napkin math based on (alleged) wafer prices and packaging costs, there's no value in these apple-to-orange price comparisons.
 

fastandfurious6

Senior member
Jun 1, 2024
976
1,088
96
(so many words to say nothing)

omg! the market speaks for itself.

posted many times here:

PTL laptop
price: 1500-2500, avg 2000+
gpu: <RTX2050
cpu: ARL > HX370 > PTL > LNL

Halo 392 laptop
price: ~1500-1800
gpu: =RTX4070
cpu: =9900X (12 Zen5 classic) >>> HX370 > PTL


Halo >>>> PTL

/thread
 

Covfefe

Member
Jul 23, 2025
107
190
76
omg! the market speaks for itself.

posted many times here:

PTL laptop
price: 1500-2500, avg 2000+
gpu: <RTX2050
cpu: ARL > HX370 > PTL > LNL

Halo 392 laptop
price: ~1500-1800
gpu: =RTX4070
cpu: =9900X (12 Zen5 classic) >>> HX370 > PTL


Halo >>>> PTL

/thread
Gift it a rest already and stop thread crapping. You're making up prices. There are Panther lake laptops below 1500 and you've shared zero Halo laptops below 1800 USD.
 

OneEng2

Golden Member
Sep 19, 2022
1,007
1,209
106
I predicted PTL is gonna be very expensive. Market proved that It is very expensive, and often even more than faster competition, Halo.

MLID agrees both with me and the market.

The market is not fluff, it is reality.

MLID isn't enough of a source on his own.

Is PTL-H 12Xe expensive? Sure. How expensive is it, relative to the competition? And how does this SoC price difference impact the end product when factoring in the increased cost of Ram and SSD? Is it $50/SoC more than Gorgon Point? $20? $100?

You're working backwards by trying to determine the SoC's price based on the launch prices of ultra-premium thin and lights launching with new MSRP's in a DRAM shortage vs discounted models from last year. You can't isolate the SoC pricing based on these handful of laptop model's launch prices.

When 2026 Gorgon Point and Gorgon Halo laptops launch with updated MSRPs impacted by RAM and SSD price increases, what will your reasoning be then? And will you isolate true competitor laptops? Or will you find some chunky plastic laptop with fat bezels, bad speakers, and poor battery life and compare it to a brand new thin and light constructed with a metal chassis that has a tandem OLED screen and draw price conclusions from that?

Unless you can provide some kind of price comparison, even some napkin math based on (alleged) wafer prices and packaging costs, there's no value in these apple-to-orange price comparisons.
What is absolutely true (and documented) is that 18A development cost Intel > $20B. That's about what a Ford class aircraft carrier costs.

It isn't crazy to think that at the very low volumes Intel is putting through 18A that each wafer is quite expensive.

I agree that product pricing alone is a hard number to use to get down to the CPU cost.

I contend that it doesn't actually matter. What matters is if Intel can make money selling them. In the past, Intel has purchased market share when they wanted (they had LOTS of money) and used this tool like a ball bat on its competitors.

Intel isn't going to be able to do this anymore IMO. It will take a few YEARS to see if 18A paid off.

Right now, fastandfurious6 appears to be right. What you can buy RIGHT NOW with PTL isn't cost competitive with other options.

Will others have to increase prices? Will PTL options go down in prices? Did Intel actually MAKE money selling PTL?

We will see.
 

OneEng2

Golden Member
Sep 19, 2022
1,007
1,209
106
Dell is cooked. They are pricing their Pantherlake laptops more than a MacBook Pro while offering less performance.
That's OK right? After all Dell is considered at the same quality level as a MacBook Pro right ;).

I have always marveled at Apple's ability to sell at a premium.
 

desrever

Senior member
Nov 6, 2021
341
832
136
LOL, obviously price doesn't matter. According to people here and reviewers, only battery life when doing basically nothing and GPU performance below 25W matter.
 

Doug S

Diamond Member
Feb 8, 2020
3,831
6,766
136
Same for power usage. Just reset the counter and grab the average package power at the end of the run. It's measured the same way for each system. Works well for comparison purposes if not for absolute accuracy.

No, its really not measured the same way. Maybe if you limit yourself to x86 it is, though even there how you gonna tell me package power is measuring EXACTLY the same thing when you have a CPU that's just a CPU, versus a CPU that includes an iGPU which is the default case in most laptops now. Apple has stuff on chip that's found on the PC motherboard on their SoC, plus stuff that's not even on the board like the SSD controller. So you better make SURE there is no background activity on the SSD during a run or you're overmeasuring power on the Mac.


Finally, for most non hybrid systems you can lock down the max frequency, set it below your cooling system limits and it will sit right there.

Also I should add, that a lot of systems allow for locking max frequency in the BIOS.

That's great, for the systems that allow it. If you want to compare against those that don't?

It's really not as impossible as you make it sound. But yes, it's easier to throw your hands up in the air and say "It's impossible" than to just do it and give up.

Otherwise we argue about much less rigorously tested data, leaks, "I saw this here," etc...

Like I said, I've being doing these types of community tests for over 30 years and have learned quite a bit.

So why you are complaining about the lack of benchmarks that meet your criteria? If you have 30 years of experience in this and know exactly what you want and believe you know how to get it? Why not create this great benchmark yourself?
 

MoistOintment

Member
Jul 31, 2024
158
252
96
What exactly does this prove?


1) We already know PTL-H 12Xe is more expensive than LNL. That's obvious

2) We know that existing LNL inventory is very cost competitive because the DRAM was already added to the package months ago

3) The XPS 14 is the replacement to the Dell Pro 14 Premium. Which retails for $1950 on Dell's website with a 236V + 512GB of RAM. That model isn't included in those screenshots, just Dell 14 Premiums.

4) A Dell 14 Premium (Lower tier product than XPS 14) with 255H, 32GB, 1TB with 3.2K display was $2400, on sale for $2000. PTL-H Xe12 in XPS14 with same RAM and storage with 2K display launched at $2049

5) That same Dell 14 Premium with the 255H is over $800 cheaper if you get 2K display, 16GB of RAM, and 512GB SSD

6) Dell Plus 256V + 1TB + 2.5K screen is great value... but it's in a Dell 14 Plus, which is the successor to the Inspiron. XPS being a lot more money than an Inspiron is obvious.

TL;DR According to these screenshots and Dell's website, PTL-H 12Xe is cost competitive to ARL-H if you get the same RAM, Storage, and screen on a Dell Pro 14 Premium vs a Dell XPS 14

What is absolutely true (and documented) is that 18A development cost Intel > $20B. That's about what a Ford class aircraft carrier costs.

It isn't crazy to think that at the very low volumes Intel is putting through 18A that each wafer is quite expensive.

Entirely dependent on the amortization period, which for Intel is what? 7 years? 10 years?
 

MoistOintment

Member
Jul 31, 2024
158
252
96
LOL, obviously price doesn't matter. According to people here and reviewers, only battery life when doing basically nothing and GPU performance below 25W matter.
Battery life when doing typical office work and home use is a significant demand in the market. Price sensitive customers shopping for e-waste at walmart do just fine with RPL-U, or MTL-U, or Kracken Point. Not like they'd notice a difference. Otherwise they wouldn't have bought e-junk.

It's this forum that over-represents desktop replacements that provide performance at the expense of all else.