The i9-13900K is Intel’s kingpin SKU for Raptor Lake. This CPU features a massive 24 core (8p+16e) / 32 thread configuration consuming as much as 350W of power when fully unlocked. Do bear in mind, since Raptor Lake has much better cooling, you wont need exotic thermal solutions (probably). The test bench features 32GB of DDR5 RAM. The motherboard is currently unknown to us. The single-thread frequency is rated at 5.5GHz and 4.6GHz across all threads. The Raptor Lake king scores a massive 171.928 GIPS in this test. Now to put this into perspective, we compiled a few charts for relative performance metrics.
— Raichu (@OneRaichu) August 16, 2022 Interestingly, despite all improvements Raptor Lake still falls behind AMD’s Zen3. This is exactly why synthetic benchmarks often don’t tell us the complete story. Raptor Lake is still not as efficient as Zen3. A while back, we got our hands on some Cinebench R23 benchmarks along with the thermals and power consumption. Intel is showing great conidence in its silicon, allowing for many leaked benchmarks. Take a look at this list:
i9-13900K (5.5GHz + 4.3GHz) = 879.7 pointsi9-13900K (5.5Ghz + ?GHz) = 893 pointsi9-13900K (6.1GHz + ?GHz) = 976 points i9-13900K (6.1GHz + No E Cores) = 1000+ pointsi7-13700K (5.8GHz + 3.7GHz) = 947 pointsi7-13700K (6.1GHz + No E Cores) = 983 pointsi7-13700K (6.18GHz + 4.18GHz) = 1010 points
New processors from team blue are often announced at their innovation event which takes place in the last week of September (27-28). Interestingly, AMD also plans to launch its Zen4 CPUs at the same date(s).