Intel’s Core i5-13600K significantly improves on its Alder Lake counterpart


Nerces

Hardware and Gaming Specialist

July 19, 2022 at 8:50 a.m.

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Intel Raptor Lake © Hardware Cooking

The 13e generation of processors Intel – Raptor Lake – is approaching and the first measures are no longer limited to the spearhead alone.

Certainly, Chinese testers don’t seem to have much trouble finding pre-production Raptor Lake processors and after the Core i9-13900K, it’s a Core i5-13600K that’s making the headlines.

4 hearts / 4 threads more than Alder Lake

In this case, it is an “ES3”, or engineering sample 3, and therefore a chip close to the final version. The frequencies should however be slightly different whereas they are here 4.9 / 5.1 GHz for the high-performance cores and 3.9 GHz for the efficient cores.

Intel Core i5-13600K CPU-Z © Videocardz

© Videocardz

Let’s take this opportunity to remind you that the Core i5-13600K marks clear progress on the Alder Lake generation Core i5-12600K: the latter had 10 cores (6+4) and 16 threads while the Raptor Lake can therefore count on 14 cores (6+8) and 20 threads.

Unfortunately, few tests have so far been conducted on this sample, which has gone through CPU-Z. There, in single corehe won 830 points and 10,031 points in multi core. In the first case, there is a gain of 8% (768 points) and 79% (5,590 points) compared to the Core i5-12600K.

© Videocardz

On CineBench R23, the results are less consistent. Indeed, there is indeed talk of a 40% increase in multi core with 24,420 points, while in single core the 1,387 points underscores…a 26% drop from the Core i5-12600K.

Finally, it is worth pointing out that the PL2 (power limit) of the Core i5-13600K seems higher than that of the Core i5-12600K: we are talking about 228 Watts against 150 W while the final version of the Raptor Lake could be blocked at 160W.

Source : Videocardz



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