Intel Core i7-11700K Rocket Lake 8 Core Desktop CPU Performance Preview Leaks Out, Barely Beats The AMD Ryzen 7 5800X

A full performance preview of the Intel Core i7-11700K 8 Core Rocket Lake Desktop CPU has been posted by Lab501. The preview is based on an engineering sample that is close to the retail unit & was compared against several existing Intel Core and AMD Ryzen CPUs.

Intel Core i7-11700K Rocket Lake 8 Core Desktop CPU Benchmarked in Performance Preview, Barely Beats The Ryzen 7 5800X While Sipping In More Power

The Intel Core i7-11700K is going to feature the exact same CPU configuration as the flagship chip except that it will offer slightly lower clock speeds and a lower price point. The CPU will be using a 14nm process node and feature the brand new Cypress Cove cores which deliver double-digit IPC gains.

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Intel Core i7-11700K 8 Core & 16 Thread Rocket Lake Desktop CPU Specifications

Coming to the specifications for the Core i7-11700K, we see that the chip features the same core configuration as the Core i9-11900K but comes with reduced clock speeds. The chip is said to feature a base clock of 3.60 GHz boost clock of 5.0 GHz on a single & 4.6 GHz across all of its 8 cores. The CPU will even carry the same amount of cache so nothing has changed but the main difference should come from the clocks and power limits. This lower-binned chip will sit at around 225-250W (PL2) limit while the PL1 limit will be standard at 125W.

It will be interesting to see how Rocket Lake CPUs overclock since the minute difference between the Core i9 and Core i7 chips can be overcome by a small overclock. As for pricing, the Core i7 will also be cheaper than the Core i9 variant but we don’t know yet how Intel will price its 8 core Rocket Lake-S Desktop CPUs yet.

Intel 11th Gen Rocket Lake Desktop CPU Lineup Specs (Preliminary):

CPU Name Cores / Threads Base Clock Boost Clock (1-Core) Boost Clock (All-Core) Cache Graphics TDP (PL1)
Core i9-11900K 8 / 16 3.50 GHz 5.30 GHz 4.80 GHz 16 MB Intel Xe 32 EU (256 Cores) 125W
Core i9-11900 8 / 16 1.80 GHz 4.50 GHz 4.00 GHz 16 MB Intel Xe 32 EU (256 Cores) 65W
Core i9-11900T 8 / 16 TBC TBC TBC 16 MB Intel Xe 32 EU (256 Cores) 35W
Core i7-11700K 8 / 16 3.60 GHz 5.00 GHz 4.60 GHz 16 MB Intel Xe 32 EU (256 Cores) 125W
Core i7-11700 8 / 16 2.50 GHz 4.90 GHz TBC 16 MB Intel Xe 32 EU (256 Cores) 65W
Core i7-11700T 8 / 16 TBC TBC 16 MB Intel Xe 32 EU (256 Cores) 35W
Core i5-11600K 6 /12 3.90 GHz 4.90 GHz 4.60 GHz 12 MB Intel Xe 32 EU (256 Cores) 125W
Core i5-11600 6 /12 TBC TBC TBC 12 MB Intel Xe 32 EU (256 Cores) 65W
Core i5-11600T 6 /12 TBC TBC TBC 12 MB Intel Xe 32 EU (256 Cores) 35W
Core i5-11500 6 /12 TBC TBC TBC 12 MB Intel Xe 32 EU (256 Cores) 65W
Core i5-11500T 6 /12 TBC TBC TBC 12 MB Intel Xe 32 EU (256 Cores) 35W
Core i5-11400 6 /12 2.60 GHz 4.400 GHz 4.20 GHz 12 MB Intel Xe 24 EU (192 Cores) 65W
Core i5-11400T 6 /12 TBC TBC TBC 12 MB Intel Xe 24 EU (192 Cores) 35W

The test platform for the Intel Rocket Lake Core i7-11700K consisted of a Z590 motherboard with 16 GB of DDR4-3200 MHz memory (CL14) and an RTX 2080 Ti graphics card. In literally every test, the CPU was outperformed by its main competitor, the AMD Ryzen 7 5800X. You can even see the benchmarks below for yourself to confirm this.

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The gaming performance is no different with the Intel Core i7-11700K barely beating the AMD Ryzen 7 5800X in a few titles while getting beaten by the AMD Ryzen 5 5600X in other titles. The source reports that the average performance gain for Intel’s Rocket Lake CPUs over AMD’s Zen 3 based Vermeer CPUs should be around 1-2%.

Talking about power consumption, the Intel Core i7-11700K system consumed 286W which is 64W higher than the AMD Ryzen 7 5800X configured setup and 76W higher than the Core i7-10700K. It looks like power consumption is still an issue that is mostly related to the 14nm process node as AMD has shifted to an enhanced 7nm process which Intel is unable to match in efficiency. At the same time, the CPU does run cooler at around 71C whereas the Ryzen 7 5800X operates at around 89C.

Now it is stated that this particular Intel Core i7-11700K is still an early engineering sample and the main issue with it is that the motherboards currently do not apply power limits correctly & cannot maintain the all-core boost frequency for prolonged durations. This could explain some of the CPU performance numbers we are looking at here but even with the final variants, we will only get to see a 5% gain in performance over these numbers and that would be the best-case scenario for the Rocket Lake CPUs. Aside from that, AMD is going to remain in a perfect position to tackle Intel with a price cut on its existing lineup.



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