Intel's most powerful line of Tiger Lake notebook processors revealed

Intel's most powerful line of Tiger Lake notebook processors revealed

The incoming line of Intel Tiger Lake-H mobile processors have seen full specification details leaked, with three 8-core models leading the charge on AMD, backed by a duo of 6-core mobile chips. The specs were rumored to be in what appears to be an official Intel document posted on Twitter by Hardware Leaker @9550pro, though as always with this sort of rumor we need to be careful not to assume that the material pictured is genuine. However, this is in line with the previous rumor we've heard of rumor, namely that a trio of 8-core models will be leading the charge with these new Tiger Lake processors for laptops (previously these 11th-gen chips were leading the charge in the market). -central processors). The featured player is the Core i9-11980HK running 8 cores (16 threads) at a 2.6GHz base clock with a default power consumption of 45W, but that can be increased to 3.3GHz if the chip is set to operate at 65W (as previously announced). The boost is 5GHz, and it's not just a single-core boost, as we've seen before, but the speed that can be achieved with two cores. The maximum boost speed across all 8 cores is 4,5GHz. The other Core i9 model, the 11900H, is a similar 8-core chip but with slightly slower clocks, plus it's not unlocked (and there's no option to run at 65W for even higher speeds - this chip can instead run at 35W instead). 45W, to control its heat output). The base clock is 2.5 GHz and the boost goes to 4.9 GHz (again with Turbo Boost Max 3.0, which only these two main processors support) on two cores. The all-core boost is 4,4GHz, so that's basically 100MHz lower than the 11980HK (assuming all those specs are correct, of course). The third 8-core processor is the Core i7-11800H which drops Turbo Boost Max 3.0, which means that its maximum amplification is 4,6 GHz (in one or two cores) and 4,2 GHz all cores, with a base clock speed of 2,4 GHz.

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These processors are backed by the Core i5-11400H and Core i5-11260H, which are 6-core (12-thread) chips capable of boosting up to 4.5 GHz and 4.4 GHz respectively, with base clocks of 2.7 GHz and 2.6 GHz. According to the leak, these Core i5 processors will support DDR4-2933 memory, with faster DDR4-3200 support reserved for the higher-tier 8-core processors. Intel has already shown off the flagship Tiger Lake-H processor (although the company didn't name it, we can now be pretty sure it's the best Core i9, at least if this leak is correct) running Total War, and doing an amazing job of make it fluid. So these mobile chips look good, as far as we can tell from the rumour, but we can't get too carried away at this point, obviously, until we've seen them in action (and these specs are confirmed elsewhere). . What Intel has confirmed is a QXNUMX release for these new Tiger Lake models, so we shouldn't have to wait long to find out exactly how these processors will perform. Today's best laptop deals Via VideoCardz