At Computex a couple of weeks ago, Intel announced its new Basin Falls platform, consisting of the X299 chipset with motherboards based on it, a pair of Kaby Lake-X processors, and a set of Skylake-X processors going all the way up to eighteen cores, denoting the first use of Intel’s enterprise level high core-count silicon in a consumer product. For the most part, we had assumed that the news was just that, and following traditional Intel strategy they would not officially give a launch date until the reviews go live sometime later. So imagine our surprise when Intel starts announcing dates at the E3 show this week.

As part of Intel’s E3 press release, as well as their presentations at the show, the new Core i9 processors were discussed, along with Intel’s continued commitment towards eSports. Intel gave the dates for the new platform as the following:

  • 4, 6, 8 and 10-core parts available for pre-order from June 19th
  • 4, 6, 8 and 10-core parts shipping to consumers from June 26th
  • 12-core parts expected to ship in August
  • 14, 16 and 18 core parts expected to ship in October

This means that the following five processors will be available from June 26th:

Intel Basin Falls X299 Processors, June 26th
  i5-7640X i7-7740X i7-7800X i7-7820X i9-7900X
Cores 4C/4T 4C/8T 6C/12T 8C/16T 10C/20T
Base Clock 4.0 GHz 4.3 GHz 3.5 GHz 3.6 GHz 3.3 GHz
Turbo Clock 4.2 GHz 4.5 GHz 4.0 GHz 4.3 GHz 4.3 GHz
TurboMax Clock N/A N/A N/A 4.5 GHz 4.5 GHz
L2 Cache 256 KB per core 1 MB per core
L3 Cache 6 MB 8 MB 8.25 MB 11 MB 13.75 MB
PCIe Lanes 16 28 44
Memory Channels 2 4
Memory Freq DDR4-2666 DDR4-2400 DDR4-2666
TDP 112 W 140 W
Price (1k tray) $242 $339 $389 $599 $999

The two quad-core parts are part of the Kaby Lake-X family, essentially using the mainstream Kaby Lake-S silicon but disabling the integrated graphics and expanding the voltage/frequency window and TDP limit to give extra frequency. As already demonstrated, extreme overclockers have hit over 7.5 GHz on these chips at a special Computex Intel event using Liquid Helium, with positive words coming out about 24/7 overclocking capabilities on air and water.

The other three parts are the Skylake-X family, with the 6, 8 and 10-core variants all coming from the same harvested low-core-count die. The big upswing for these processors is the rearranged cache arrangement, with Intel moving from 256KB of L2 cache on the previous generation to 1MB of L2 cache on Skylake-X (and changing the L3 cache from being a fully inclusive cache to being a non-inclusive cache). This significantly enhances software which is L2 cache size sensitive, although it remains to be seen how much of an effect it will have for consumers.

For the other parts, 12 core and up, Intel is staggering their launch to the extent that we do not even know many of the details. Intel's own documents list them all as TBD for frequency, power and DRAM support – the only certainties are core counts, pricing, and the fact that they will use the same socket as the above five processors. The August shipping date for the 12-core will be interesting, given that Dell has announced that pre-orders for its ThreadRipper Alienware desktops start on July 27th. The same announcement from Dell states 'and the Area 51 featuring Intel Core X-Series will arrive on August 22nd, and the product page states that this includes the 12-core option, as well as 6-10 cores. Whether the wording 'arrive' means pre-order or release we do not know, although the TR version explicitly states 'pre-order'. Ryan points out that this could just mean the 6-10 core options, as it doesn't explicitly state the 12 core and Intel hasn't made a firm date themselves yet.

Further Reading

Source: Intel

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  • Gothmoth - Tuesday, June 13, 2017 - link

    boy it´s about expansion ... the stuff you connect to your mainboard. it´s not about speed.

    2 GPU´s, M.2, hardware raid card, video cards etc. etc. pp.

    not everyone is a gamer kiddie....
  • Hurr Durr - Wednesday, June 14, 2017 - link

    >boy
    >kiddie

    I see someone got rekt here, and it`s not him.
  • bigboxes - Thursday, June 15, 2017 - link

    I see the Intel fanboys are out in force. I'm running a 4790K in my main rig and am planning out a monster dual-Xeon home server, but don't let that confirm your bias. I'm for competition that benefits the consumer and not the corporations. Who cares which company "wins".
  • hahmed330 - Tuesday, June 13, 2017 - link

    Not really Etherium mining comes to mind think of all the dough $$$$$$$$$$
  • mapesdhs - Thursday, June 15, 2017 - link

    TS., try running a CUDA app on 4 GPUs, can't do that with a 28 lane CPU. Cutting back on PCIe lane provision in this way was one of the dumbest things Intel did with its highend consumer CPUs. It's crazy that an old 4820K supports better GPU provision than a 7820K.
  • mapesdhs - Thursday, June 15, 2017 - link

    Amusing that a used 4820K for $75 has 40 lanes.
  • zodiacfml - Tuesday, June 13, 2017 - link

    Any news on Cannon Lake? Some news stating it will be coming at the end of the year.
  • Meteor2 - Tuesday, June 13, 2017 - link

    I don't think that's changed (it's officially been 'late 2017' for a few months). What I don't think has been clarified is what 'data centre first' actually means (there's no way they have a big-die CPU ready to go on 10 nm). It's also very/completely unclear how Cannon Lake and Coffee Lake are going to line up. Cannon Lake for the Y-series and Coffee Lake with 4C/8T for U?
  • Meteor2 - Tuesday, June 13, 2017 - link

    Intel does seem to be a bit of a mess at the moment. I guess it just doesn't know what technologies are going to work and which aren't. It's getting hard now.

    http://www.pcworld.com/article/3168827/components-...

    This X series is something it could've launched anytime in the last seven years or so, but hasn't needed to until now. It could make huge amounts of money from a handful of -EP chips. Thank god for AMD.
  • Meteor2 - Tuesday, June 13, 2017 - link

    PS I've realised that data centre-first probably means some small relatively simple networking chips. That sort of thing. Not big CPUs.

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