Haswell-E in detail
|
i7-5960X |
i7-4960X |
i7-5930K |
i7-4930K |
i7-5820K |
i7-4820K |
Codename |
Haswell-E |
Ivy Bridge-E |
Haswell-E |
Ivy Bridge |
Haswell-E |
Haswell |
Socket |
LGA2011-3 |
LGA2011 |
LGA2011-3 |
LGA2011 |
LGA2011-3 |
LGA2011 |
Manufacturing |
22 nm |
22 nm |
22 nm |
22 nm |
22 nm |
22 nm |
Transistors |
2.6 Billion |
1.86 Billion |
2.6 Billion |
1.86 Billion |
2.6 Billion |
1.86 Billion |
Die-size |
356 mm2 |
257 mm2 |
356 mm2 |
257 mm2 |
356 mm2 |
257 mm2 |
Clock |
3.00 GHz (3.50 GHz Turbo) |
3.60 GHz (4.00 GHz Turbo) |
3.50 GHz (3.70 GHz Turbo) |
3.40 GHz (3.90 GHz Turbo) |
3.30 GHz (3.60 GHz Turbo) |
3.70 GHz (3.90 GHz Turbo) |
Cores / Threads |
8C / 16T |
6C / 12T |
6C / 12T |
6C / 12T |
6C / 12T |
4C / 8T |
Turbo |
Yes (2.0) |
Yes (2.0) |
Yes (2.0) |
Yes (2.0) |
Yes (2.0) |
Yes (2.0) |
Bus Speed |
100 MHz |
100 MHz |
100 MHz |
100 MHz |
100 MHz |
100 MHz |
Memory |
DDR4-2133 |
DDR3-1866 |
DDR4-2133 |
DDR3-1866 |
DDR4-2133 |
DDR3-1866 |
Memory controller |
Quad Channel |
Quad Channel |
Quad Channel |
QuadChannel |
Quad Channel |
QuadChannel |
L1 Execution Cache |
32 KByte |
32 KByte |
32 KByte |
32 KByte |
32 KByte |
32 KByte |
L1 Data Cache |
32 KByte |
32 KByte |
32 KByte |
32 KByte |
32 KByte |
32 KByte |
L2 Cache |
256 KByte |
256 KByte |
256 KByte |
256 KByte |
256 KByte |
256 KByte |
L3 Cache |
20 MB shared |
15 MB shared |
15 MB shared |
12 MB shared |
15 MB shared |
10 MB shared |
TDP |
140 Watt |
130 Watt |
140 Watt |
130 Watt |
140 Watt |
130Watt |
C1E technology |
Yes |
Yes |
Yes |
Yes |
Yes |
Yes |
Enhanced Intel Speed Step |
Yes |
Yes |
Yes |
Yes |
Yes |
Yes |
Virtualisation |
Vanderpool |
Vanderpool |
Vanderpool |
Vanderpool |
Vanderpool |
Vanderpool |
Instruction sets |
MMX, SSE, SSE2, SSE3, SSE4.1,
SSE4.2, AES, AVX, EM64T |
MMX, SSE, SSE2, SSE3, SSE4.1,
SSE4.2, AES, AVX, EM64T |
MMX, SSE, SSE2, SSE3, SSE4.1,
SSE4.2, AES, AVX, EM64T |
MMX, SSE, SSE2, SSE3, SSE4.1,
SSE4.2, AES, AVX, EM64T |
MMX, SSE, SSE2, SSE3, SSE4.1,
SSE4.2, AES, AVX, EM64T |
MMX, SSE, SSE2, SSE3, SSE4.1,
SSE4.2, AES, AVX, EM64T |
MSRP |
999 US-Dollar |
|
583 US-Dollar |
|
389 US-Dollar |
|
As we already mentioned, one
big step forward from Ivy Bridge-E to Haswell-E is the introduction of the DDR4
memory interface as well as apparently DDR4 memory. As it always is when a new
DDR technology is making it to market, memory frequency on the new modules needs
to be substantially higher in order to outperform the earlier generation. The
reason is also always the same: the new generation of DDR memory is using a set
of higher latencies and these need to be compensated by higher clock speeds.
This in the end is the reason why we're testing different memory presets, since
we want to give you an outlook on what DDR4 will be capable of in the coming
months.
What's new apart from the DDR4 memory interface is the increased core count on
the new flagship model. In the past Intel has been offering 8 core / 16 threads
CPUs on the server market and now they're bringing this architecture to the
high-end desktop market. For obvious reasons it's the applications that support
multicore architectures, which will benfit the most from the added cores, such
as video encoding, just to mention an example.
Furthermore we can also see that Intel has increased the TDP with Haswell-E. In
the case of Ivy Bridge-E the TDP was set at 130 Watts and with Haswell-E the
thermal design power is now 140 Watt. In our opinion this is a reasonable move.
Since enthusiasts and professionals demand the most powerful systems they can
get. Apart from that todays high-end aircoolers as well as all-in-one
watercoolers are perfectly capable of removing this kind of heat at reasonable
noise levels. One might now reason that overall power consumption might be going
up. This is acutally true in a full load scenario, but when it comes to idle
power consumption, there is no increase thanks to rather efficient power saving
options.
If we dive a little bit deeper into what's been
change or added to the new Haswell-E processors, there is for example the
updated Socket LGA2011-v3. This upgrade was necessary due to the DDR4 memory
interface. Apart form that, as we already mentioned, Intels new high-end desktop
processors no feature eight as well as six core, whereas the predecessors were
limited to six/four cores, depending on the model. What's also new is the X99
platform, about which we're going to talk in the following paragraph. Another
point worth mentioning is the number of PCI Express 3.0 lanes, that are
available. If you take a closer look you will notice that the Core i7-5960X as
well as the Core i7-5930K support 40 PCI Express 3.0 lanes and the Core i7-5820K
supports 28 lanes. Intels reasoning is that they wanted to have a CPU, which is
positioned inbetween the Core i7-4790K and the Core i7-5930K. Basically Intel
wanted to offer a reasonably price six core part that can benefit from the X99
platform.
Let's just dive into the new X99 platform right away. Intel made it
clear that they're very proud about the fact, that the new PCH natively supports
ten SATA 3.0 devices. Apart from that it is possible to run up to ten drives in
RAID configurations, which allows for some impressive performance numbers
regarding the storage subsystem. Looking at the picture above, on the other side
of the PCH we see that six USB 3.0 ports are natively supported. We were
actually hoping Intel would increase that number to ten, but since that is not
the case motherboard makers will continue using third party chips. High-end
multi GPU systems will benefit from the 40 PCI Express 3.0 lanes you get with
the Core i7-5960X as well as Core i7-5930K. Therefore four-way configurations
are possible and you could even add another x8 card to the system. Other than
that there aren't too many things we haven't yet discussed on this page. The
DDR4 memory interface runs at 2133 MHz default, there is Intel High Definiteion
audio, Intel Rapid Storage Technology 13.1 is supported, Intel Gigabit LAN is
onboard, there are eight USB 2.0 ports and when it comes to software Intel is
still supporting Extreme Tuning Utility.