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16.10.2023 - 16:33 / pcgamer.com / New / Of Its
After weeks of leaks and rumours, Intel has officially announced its 14th Generation of Core desktop CPUs, starting with a total of six new models. There's the Core i9 14900K, i7 14700K and i5 14600K, along with KF variants missing the iGPU component. Prices for each one are the same as the previous generation and you're getting a bit more clock speed, an update to the i7 configuration, and that's mostly it.
Not that you should be surprised one bit as these chips are internally the same as the Core i9 13900K and so on. In other words, Intel is still using the Raptor Lake architecture for these processors and the higher clock speeds, and other differences, come entirely from how the chips are selected from the binning process during manufacturing.
That means the i9 14900K and 14900KF still sports an 8+16 P-core/E-core configuration but the base and boost clocks are higher than those for the 13900K and KF. For the P-cores, the clock range starts at 3.2GHz and goes up to 5.6GHz for the Max Turbo Frequency (MTF), and 6.0GHz for the Velocity Boost Frequency. The E-core clock range is 2.4GHz through to 4.4GHz (MTF).
The small, 0.2GHz clock speed upgrades haven't resulted in higher power limits, as the TDP (PL1) and PL2 values are still 125W and 253W, respectively. What has changed, though, is the core configuration for the stars of the Core i7 lineup, the 14700K and 14700KF. Previously, this was an 8+8 setup, but Intel added an extra block of four E-cores to the new CPU, so both 14700 models are 8+12.
Those extra E-cores will come in handy for heavily multithreaded applications, and the total amount of L3 cache has changed from 30MB to 33MB. Like their bigger brothers, the 14th Gen i7 chips only boast a minor boost in clock speed. Base values are still at 3.4GHz for the P-cores and 2.5GHz for the E-cores, but the MTFs are now 0.1GHz higher.
Moving down a tier to the i5 14600K and 14600KF, there are no extra cores to be found nor an increase to the base clocks, but the P-cores now offer an MTF of 5.3GHz (0.2GHz higher) and the E-cores can now run up to 4.0GHz (a 0.1GHz increase). All of the new i5 and i5 CPUs have the same power limits as their 13th Gen predecessors.
One other change across the board is the total amount of supported memory. Previously it capped out at 128GB but it's now 192GB, though lots of motherboards for the 13th Generation CPUs already support the higher amount. That's because there's a fairly recent trend towards 24GB and 48GB DDR5 modules, so the change in specifications is probably just a formal recognition of this.
As with all new processor releases, Intel is claiming that the new i9 14900K is better for gaming than AMD's offerings. Figures showing the chip against the Ryzen 7
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