Rumor: Intel to postpone LGA2011 to Q4 2011

RussianSensation

Elite Member
Sep 5, 2003
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"Intel Corp. plans to update its enthusiast-class desktop platform late this year with Sandy Bridge E-series processors. Previously it was believed that the company would introduce them earlier during the year, but instead the company will speed-up the current platform with faster chips and will only bring the brand new platform in the fourth quarter to the market.

A document seen by X-bit labs indicated that Intel intends to introduce its Sandy Bridge E-series microprocessors in LGA2011 form-factor for extreme and premium performance desktop PC segments in Q4 2011. Earlier it was believed that the chip giant would unveil the new central processing units (CPUs) for enthusiasts sometimes in Q3 2011, but it looks like the company decided to postpone the release by several months.

Intel Sandy Bridge E microprocessors are specifically designed for enthusiasts, who demand maximum performance. For example, the chips will carry "extra large cache" to maximize speed of single-threaded or dual-threaded applications, quad-channel memory controller and a number of other enhancements. Sandy Bridge E chips with four or six cores will be paired with code-named Patsburg core-logic set. Platforms based on the latter will feature external base frequency generators and clock-speeds of buses like SATA or USB locked. As a result, enthusiasts will be able to boost clock-speed of microprocessors using traditional methods by increasing DMI frequencies, something that will allow them to easily and more efficiently to overclock their CPUs.

Thanks to a number of micro-architectural enhancements of Sandy Bridge, the new line of extreme processors promises to be very fast. It remains to be seen whether six-core Intel processors will be able to outperform eight-core chips from Advanced Micro Devices, which are due to be released in Q2 - Q3 2011.

Before launching the new LGA2011 platform for enthusiasts in Q4, Intel plans to speed up the current one with a new Core i7 9-series Extreme Edition microprocessor sometimes in the second or in the third quarters."

Source
 

Rifter

Lifer
Oct 9, 1999
11,522
751
126
I always expected it Q4. It would also not surprise me if it was Same time as SB 1155, at CES.

Perhaps the server 2011 boards/chips will be out sooner i guess time will tell.
 

Nemesis 1

Lifer
Dec 30, 2006
11,366
2
0
Looks like Intel found out BDs performance and is easing back . If BD was all that Intel would push out sooner. Also Got a link from Intel saying sooner than 4th qt. As I always thought 4th qt from intels released info.
 

tweakboy

Diamond Member
Jan 3, 2010
9,517
2
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"Intel Corp. plans to update its enthusiast-class desktop platform late this year with Sandy Bridge E-series processors. Previously it was believed that the company would introduce them earlier during the year, but instead the company will speed-up the current platform with faster chips and will only bring the brand new platform in the fourth quarter to the market.

A document seen by X-bit labs indicated that Intel intends to introduce its Sandy Bridge E-series microprocessors in LGA2011 form-factor for extreme and premium performance desktop PC segments in Q4 2011. Earlier it was believed that the chip giant would unveil the new central processing units (CPUs) for enthusiasts sometimes in Q3 2011, but it looks like the company decided to postpone the release by several months.

Intel Sandy Bridge E microprocessors are specifically designed for enthusiasts, who demand maximum performance. For example, the chips will carry "extra large cache" to maximize speed of single-threaded or dual-threaded applications, quad-channel memory controller and a number of other enhancements. Sandy Bridge E chips with four or six cores will be paired with code-named Patsburg core-logic set. Platforms based on the latter will feature external base frequency generators and clock-speeds of buses like SATA or USB locked. As a result, enthusiasts will be able to boost clock-speed of microprocessors using traditional methods by increasing DMI frequencies, something that will allow them to easily and more efficiently to overclock their CPUs.

Thanks to a number of micro-architectural enhancements of Sandy Bridge, the new line of extreme processors promises to be very fast. It remains to be seen whether six-core Intel processors will be able to outperform eight-core chips from Advanced Micro Devices, which are due to be released in Q2 - Q3 2011.

Before launching the new LGA2011 platform for enthusiasts in Q4, Intel plans to speed up the current one with a new Core i7 9-series Extreme Edition microprocessor sometimes in the second or in the third quarters."

Source


Thanks Russian soo much for that information.

I guess peep should wait until summer! thx
 

tweakboy

Diamond Member
Jan 3, 2010
9,517
2
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You are welcome. I see you swapped that 8800GT/460 for a 560 :thumbsup:


Hey my brother Russian, Ya I blew up my 460 by having comp on and I had a metal grill that touched it and the resistors blew up each time turning on comp.

Fry's took it back minus the rebate. It was 4 days past a month too.

Soo I got the vanilla EVGA 560 Ti ... havent maxed out the OC yet, havent even touched the voltage since I dont know about it compared to 460 voltage which max was different.

Im happy adding the money to the refund and getting this.

I wonder what voltage it needs to be at to run @ 1000Mhz core . hmmm

thx russian you rock.
 

Edrick

Golden Member
Feb 18, 2010
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A document seen by X-bit labs indicated that Intel intends to introduce its Sandy Bridge E-series microprocessors in LGA2011 form-factor for extreme and premium performance desktop PC segments in Q4 2011. Earlier it was believed that the chip giant would unveil the new central processing units (CPUs) for enthusiasts sometimes in Q3 2011, but it looks like the company decided to postpone the release by several months.
Damit! So basically you will have to choose between 32nm SB-E or 22nm IB on LGA1155, since they will be released so close to each other.


Intel Sandy Bridge E microprocessors are specifically designed for enthusiasts, who demand maximum performance. For example, the chips will carry "extra large cache" to maximize speed of single-threaded or dual-threaded applications, quad-channel memory controller and a number of other enhancements. Sandy Bridge E chips with four or six cores will be paired with code-named Patsburg core-logic set. Platforms based on the latter will feature external base frequency generators and clock-speeds of buses like SATA or USB locked. As a result, enthusiasts will be able to boost clock-speed of microprocessors using traditional methods by increasing DMI frequencies, something that will allow them to easily and more efficiently to overclock their CPUs."

At least this is sounds like 20MB L3 and 4 channel memory is looking more and more likely.
 

RussianSensation

Elite Member
Sep 5, 2003
19,458
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At least this is sounds like 20MB L3 and 4 channel memory is looking more and more likely.

Yup, it may look like by the time SB-E is released, 22nm Ivy bridge will be right around the corner on 1155. We may have a situation of people having to choose between an overclocked 5.5+ghz 4-core HT Ivy vs. 4.5-4.6ghz 6-core SB-E. Since most users won't really benefit from an extra 2 cores in the foreseeable future, the better overclocking quads with HT may actually be better than the "enthusiast platform". Of course this is just guessing on my part.

The 4-channel memory adds even more $$ to the platform cost. 8GB of Ram will be enough for a while. Seems like you will be "forced" to buy 16GB of ram which brings no benefits, or buy older 2GB DIMMs. SB-E platform will need to be really fast to warrant being released almost 1 year after the first 1155 chips.
 
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gregoryvg

Senior member
Jul 8, 2008
241
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So what does that mean for the 1155/P67 boards? I know it's way to early to be talking about upgrades for that, but is it pretty much a locked-in dead platform past the i7 2600k?
 

RussianSensation

Elite Member
Sep 5, 2003
19,458
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So what does that mean for the 1155/P67 boards? I know it's way to early to be talking about upgrades for that, but is it pretty much a locked-in dead platform past the i7 2600k?

Rumor has it that Ivy will be compatible with P67 on 1155. Of course with Intel, you don't know for sure until they actually announce this officially. I would imagine though that 1155 will be limited to quad-cores even on 22nm. I believe Intel will ship 6- and 8-core SB processors exclusively on their LGA2011 platform. This strategy would make much more sense if they plan on splitting the market into "mainstream" and "high-end" platforms. If this happens, for the first time Intel will actually be able to claim truly superior features on their high-end platform and price the platform accordingly, which wasn't really the case with S1366, where the "premium" was more attributable to the price rather than features.
 
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tweakboy

Diamond Member
Jan 3, 2010
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Rumor has it that Ivy will be compatible with P67 on 1155. Of course with Intel, you don't know for sure until they actually announce this officially. I would imagine though that 1155 will be limited to quad-cores even on 22nm. I believe Intel will ship 6- and 8-core SB processors on their LGA2011 platform. This strategy would make much more sense if they plan on splitting the market into "mainstream" and "high-end" platforms. If this happens, for the first time Intel will actually be able to claim truly superior features on their high-end platform and price the platform accordingly, which wasn't really the case with S1366, where the "premium" was more attributable to the price rather than features.


Wow 8 core. 16 logical threads. OCes to 4.5 Im shure 16GB RAM , wow,,,,
 

bryanW1995

Lifer
May 22, 2007
11,144
32
91
Damit! So basically you will have to choose between 32nm SB-E or 22nm IB on LGA1155, since they will be released so close to each other.




At least this is sounds like 20MB L3 and 4 channel memory is looking more and more likely.

don't hold your breath on that, IB is going to get moved back as well. This is probably a reaction to the SB fiasco more than anything BD related.
 

Edrick

Golden Member
Feb 18, 2010
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don't hold your breath on that, IB is going to get moved back as well. This is probably a reaction to the SB fiasco more than anything BD related.

There is nothing wrong with the SB CPU. Just the chipset, and it was a dumb bug. I highly doubt that would cause delays into IB next year.
 
May 13, 2009
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I'm still not sure why I need more cpu than the X-58 I'm currently using? I'm using a gtx 580 and I'm pretty sure even a stock clocked i7 930 is still not even close to bottlenecking the gtx 580. I guess if it's worth $500-$600 to build a sandy bridge rig to cut 3 seconds off your encoding times then more power to ya.
 

Castiel

Golden Member
Dec 31, 2010
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don't hold your breath on that, IB is going to get moved back as well. This is probably a reaction to the SB fiasco more than anything BD related.

Processor is fine and ib will be on schedule

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bunnyfubbles

Lifer
Sep 3, 2001
12,248
3
0
Wow 8 core. 16 logical threads. OCes to 4.5 Im shure 16GB RAM , wow,,,,

16GB sounds like chump change for LGA 2011, 16GB will likely be standard fare for many enthusiasts by Q4'11, regardless of platform - I already have 16GB on my LGA 1155 system and even had 24GB in my LGA 1366 system at one point just to mess around with. 4GB DDR3 modules are becoming very affordable.
 

aigomorla

CPU, Cases&Cooling Mod PC Gaming Mod Elite Member
Super Moderator
Sep 28, 2005
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<--- can i say i called it?

Or do you guys want to join me out singing in the rain? :p
 

Idontcare

Elite Member
Oct 10, 1999
21,110
64
91
If IB expands beyond quad-cores then I'd hope they are entertaining the prospect of making triple channel mainstream.