In new benchmarks, the Intel Core i9-13900 engineering sample outperforms Alder Lake by 20%

In new benchmarks, the Intel Core i9-13900 engineering sample outperforms Alder Lake by 20%

As we draw closer to the release of Intel’s next 13th-gen chips, leaks are happening more often. New tests of an i9-13900 engineering sample reveal that the addition of eight more E-cores will significantly improve the CPU’s multi-threaded performance.

Even though the 13th-generation Raptor Lake CPUs from Intel have not yet been released, a Chinese tech website managed to get and test an early sample of the i9-13900.

It has twice as many performance cores than its predecessor, the i9-12900, with 8 Performance cores and an astounding 16 efficient cores. Raptor Cove, a new microarchitecture for the P-cores, and more L2 and L3 cache are two further noteworthy distinctions.

In testing, ExpReview discovered that the unannounced CPU is unexpectedly already supported on a current-gen Z690 motherboard. The large cores can only turbo to 3.8 GHz, though, as this is an engineering prototype.

The additional E-cores in the i9-13900 allow it to perform applications benchmarks 20% quicker than an i9-12900K locked at the same frequency. When it comes to single-threaded tasks and gaming, the Raptor Lake chip is a little slower than its predecessor, but we can probably blame this on the microcode’s incomplete development and the absence of adequate BIOS support.

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This week, Intel also released an update for its Extreme Tuning Utility that added support for “Efficient Thermal Velocity Boost” and a few additional overclocking features. A high-end Raptor Lake SKU (perhaps the i9-12900KS successor?) may leverage these characteristics to accelerate up to 6 GHz on one or two cores, according to a hardware leaker.

To read our blog on “Clock speeds could be increased by 20% with Intel 4 process node,” click here.

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