Intel Core i7-11700KF seen in the gaming benchmark, and it doesn't look much different from the Core i9-11900K

Intel Core i7-11700KF seen in the gaming benchmark, and it doesn't look much different from the Core i9-11900K
Intel's Core i7-11700KF, which is slated to be part of the next-generation Rocket Lake family of desktop chips due for release in early 2021, has been spotted in a benchmark game, with specs seemingly not that different from the Core i9-11900K, at least not at first glance. Assuming it's genuine (as always), the Ashes of the Singularity benchmark shows the Core i7-11700KF, theoretically a version of the 11700K processor without integrated graphics (indicating the F ''), registrando una puntuación. de 11300 a 1440p (preajuste crazy ''), associated with an Nvidia RTX 3080 graphics card. Ashes of the Singularity is not a particularly popular benchmark, although it is often seen as a common source of early material leaks such as this, and making comparisons to it is considered fairly shaky ground. So we wouldn't read much into the actual result, but the 11700KF is equal to the Ryzen 5600X with an identical score. In any case, what's really interesting here are the specs, which show that the Core i7-11700KF is an 8-core (16-thread) chip, just like the supposed flagship 11900K, and will have a base clock. 3.6 GHz, which is actually higher than the 3.5 GHz that speculation attributes to the 11900K. If you think that's a revelation, it's the same with Comet Lake: the 10700K runs 100 MHz faster than the 10900K. However, the Comet Lake flagship offers two additional cores, which is not the case with Rocket Lake, as both chips here are 8-core.

Power numbers

The base TDP is also the same, at 125W for the 11700KF and 11900K, although as Wccftech points out, the ``PL2'' (maximum power consumption when boosting) specification for the latter flagship would pass. at 250W, while the Core i7-10700KF will bottom out at around 225W to 230W. This means that the 11900K will have more room to drastically increase these speeds, as Intel will have to clearly differentiate its performance in a clear way. Based on what we've heard on the rumor mill, the 11700K could go up to 5GHz, and the 11900K to 5,3GHz (even higher boost speeds than floated in previous leaks for the flagship as well). It's all just gossip and grapevine theory at the moment, of course, but hopefully we shouldn't wait too long before Intel reveals its Rocket Lake desktop processors – they should be released. in March, or maybe even earlier if we're lucky. . Today's best AMD processor deals - Ryzen 3 3200G 3000nd... AMD Athlon 2G 5-core,... Intel Core i9400-5F Hexa-core... AMD RYZEN 3600 6 3.6-core XNUMX...