With Intel’s Coffee Lake announcement just days away, the leaks are starting to roll in. Today, slides from one of Intel’s presentations appeared on the web, showing the expected performance gains the company is expecting in the jump from Kaby Lake to Coffee Lake on desktop systems.
This presentation reportedly took place as part of training for retailers in China. According to the slide, Intel’s upcoming Core i7 8700K CPU will be around 11 percent faster than the 7700K in single threaded applications and 51 percent faster in multi-threaded ones. Meanwhile, the Core i5 8600K is said to receive a 19 percent performance boost over the Kaby Lake i5 in single-threaded workloads and a 55 percent boost in multi-threaded.
Intel will be announcing Coffee Lake on Monday the 21st of August, timing its announcement with the US solar eclipse. From there, an official release is expected before the end of this year. Aside from performance improvements, Intel will also be bumping up the core counts for its mainstream processors in the wake of Ryzen.
Going forward, Intel’s 8th Gen Core i7 and Core i5 parts will utilise six cores. As usual though, Hyper Threading will be reserved for the Core i7. Meanwhile, the Core i3 will no longer be a dual-core part, instead, the Core i3 will finally join the quad-core club. Speaking of the Core i3, this chip also appeared on the performance boost slide. Up against the Core i3 7350K, Intel’s 8th Gen equivalent will be 17 percent better in single-threaded workloads and 65 percent better in multi-thread.
Here's the full set of stats from the slide:
Kaby Lake | Single-thread Performance Gain (%) | Multi-thread Performance Gain (%) | Coffee Lake |
Core i7 7700K | 11 | 51 | Core i7 8700K |
Core i7 7700 | 18 | 58 | Core i7 8700 |
Core i5 7600K | 19 | 55 | Core i5 8600K |
Core i5 7400 | 29 | 61 | Core i5 8400 |
Core i3 7350K | 17 | 65 | Core i3 8350K |
Core i3 7100 | 16 | 61 | Core i3 8100 |
KitGuru Says: That is about all we could grab from the slide leak. We don’t have to wait very long for confirmation on this either, as Intel’s announcement will be happening on Monday afternoon. Until then, let us know what you think about the leaked performance improvements in the comments!
About time. With a little help from AMD to finally keep them honest, Intel might get back to making some innovative CPUs.
Not enough, should have been 8C/16T, with solder..
I already run a Core i5 7600K system with an 18% overclock so the new Core i5 8600K has to overclock as effectively too to be attractive (and no, I normally only upgrade for new memory and storage technologies, not processor power).
People128s
The first hexa-core on Intel’s mainstream performance platform should have been in mid-2015 with the initial Skylake launch.