Over the last few weeks, we have been hearing whispers about Intel's upcoming X299 Skylake-X and Kaby Lake-X lineup. In fact, just last night we heard that an 18 core/36 thread CPU was on the cards. Now, Intel has made it all official, announcing its new Core X-series processor family at Computex, starting off with a 4C/4T i5 and going all the way up to an 18C/36T Core i9 CPU.
Intel is billing this new processor family as its best for content creation, 4K gaming, streaming and overclocking. Key highlights from the presentation include support for more PCIe lanes for multi-GPU configurations, Intel's new AVX-512 ratio offset and per-core overclocking and voltage adjustments. All of these CPUs run on Intel's new X299 chipset, which offers significantly enhanced IO connectivity compared to X99 and similarly to the Z100 and Z200 series, X299 will be connected to the CPU via DMI 3.0, which has a similar amount of bandwidth to PCIe 3.0 x4.
This is set to be Intel's most scalable HEDT platform ever, running from quad-core SKUs all of the way up to 18-cores, all running on LGA Socket 2066 with the X299 chipset. According to Intel, there will be up to a 10 percent performance increase in multithreaded workloads compared to last generation and up to a 15 percent improvement when it comes to single-core workloads.
X299 supports up to 44 PCIe lanes directly connected to the CPU, allowing systems to be expanded with multiple discrete GPUs, fast SSDs and Thunderbolt 3 devices. This new platform also supports Intel's new Optane Memory and Optane SSD products.
Here are the new Skylake-X CPUs with core counts and pricing:
- Core i9-7980XE: 18C/36T, $1,999
- Core i9-7960X: 16C/32T, $1,699
- Core i9-7940X: 14C/28T, $1,399
- Core i9-7920X: 12C/24T, $1,199
- Core i9-7900X: 10C/20T, $999
- Core i7-7820X: 8C/16T, $599
- Core i7-7800x: 6C/12T, $389
Here are the Kaby Lake-X CPUs with core counts and pricing:
- Core i7-7740X: 4C/8T, $339
- Core i5-7640X: 4C/4T. $242
While all of these CPUs run on the new X299 platform, some features are limited to select SKUs. Turbo Boost Max 3.0 for instance improves single and dual core performance on X-series CPUs by selecting the best core on the chip for the job. However, it is only available on the Core i7-7820X and up. Aside from that, the amount of PCIe lanes available will vary depending on which SKU you go with. More details on that will be arriving at a later time.
One thing worth noting is that Intel has changed, or rebalanced as the company prefers to put it, the smart cache hierarchy for Skylake-X CPUs (not Kaby Lake-X chips). This results in a decrease in the headline figure for total cache but Intel has increased capacity closer to the processor. Level 3 cache (LLC– Last Level Cache, as Intel likes to describe it) is reduced to up to 1.375MB of non-inclusive cache per core (vs up to 2.5MB of inclusive cache per core for Haswell-E and Broadwell-E).
To rebalance the reduction in 3 capacity, Intel has quadrupled Level 2 cache (MLC–Mid Level Cache, as Intel likes to describe it) from 256KB per core (for Haswell-E and Broadwell-E) to 1MB per core. So you get a 45% reduction in LLC but a 300% increase in MLC. Overall cache capacity is reduced due to the bias towards capacity for last-level cache. But there is a greater quantity of cache one step closer to the CPU, at the MLC level.
From what we have heard through the grapevine, the two Kaby Lake-X SKUs in addition to the Core i7-7800X, 7820X and Core i9-7900X will go on sale in June. The rest of the Core i9 lineup is said to be coming a little later in the year but we don't have a firm date just yet. This lines up with previous rumours that indicated that some SKUs would arrive in August, though this date was not confirmed.
KitGuru Says: Intel has really brought the big guns with its HEDT platform this year, with CPUs ranging from as low as $242 and hitting price points all of the way up to $1,999. It will certainly be interesting to see how Skylake-X fares against AMD's upcoming Threadripper CPUs later in the year.
Credit to Luke Hill for the additional reporting and detail.
Hey Matthew, me again 😉 in your price listing : 18c/36t 😉 thanks for the article 😀
AMD pushed the market down. 8core i7 now dropped to 600$. I am interested in the 16core versions and if AMD is half the money at 800$ is the super deal and Intel will eat their dust 🙂
Even if Intel is faster if it is double the price is a a deal breaker.
I was going for an 8core AMD but if they will be released soon and the price of 16core is at 700 to 800 $ I will go 16core for content creation will be super fast. I hope that will release an matx version as I will install it on a portable 17″ industrial pc chassis 🙂
AMD pushed the market down. 8core i7 now dropped to 600$. I am interested in the 16core version and if AMD is half the money at 800$ is the super deal and Intel will eat their dust 🙂
Even if Intel is faster if it is double the price is a a deal breaker.
I was going for an 8core AMD but if they will be release soon and the price of 16core is at 700 to 800 $ I will go 16core for content creation will be super fast. I hope that will release an matx version as I will install it on a portable 17″ industrial pc chassis 🙂
Important to note that the new HEDT chips will use TIM between the chip and IHS instead of soldering.
https://www.techpowerup.com/233865/intels-skylake-x-kaby-lake-x-hedt-cpus-to-use-tim-wont-be-soldered
Makes me suspicious of them recommending a watercooler for standard use cooling, even going as far as to make a stock water option. And I don’t fancy the prospect of delidding a $2k cpu, tyvm.
With those prices I think Intel is still very much in trouble.
Well considering last years 10 core chip was upward of 1700 usd, and this years for the same price you get 16 cores which will clock much higher, its a nice price drop, but id like to see it a lot cheaper across the board. Happy with my 5.1ghz 7700K for now but may switch to ryzen once their platform is mature, maybe ryzen 2000 series hmm