Core i9-13900K: 60 percent faster than 12900K in the 7-Zip benchmark [Gerücht]

Intel Core i9-13900K: With 5.8 GHz more than 2,200 points in Geekbench 5


from Oliver Jaeger
Twitter user “OneRaichu” shared screenshots showing the Raptor Lake flagship Core i9-13900K compared to the Alder Lake counterpart Core i9-12900K in the 7-Zip (de)compression benchmark. In terms of decompression, the Raptor Lake CPU is about 60 percent faster than the Alder Lake CPU.

According to the latest speculation, Intel won’t keep customers waiting much longer for its new Raptor Lake CPU generation. The new processors should then have more cores and higher clock rates than their twelfth-generation predecessors. What that means for the difference in performance between the two CPU generations was demonstrated again by a user on Twitter, this time “OneRaichu”, with fresh screenshots of the 7-Zip software.

13900K around 60 percent faster than 12900K in the decompression benchmark

These screenshots show benchmarks of the Core i9-13900K and Core i9-12900K, in compression and decompression respectively. The first results in a 20 percent faster result on the part of the Raptor Lake CPU with a good 172 GIPS (giga instructions per second) to 144 GIPS with Alder Lake.

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When it comes to decompression, the i9-13900K is then clearly superior to the i9-12900K; here it is 231 to 144 plaster. The Raptor Lake flagship would be about 60 percent faster, based on the published screenshots from OneRaichu. Both Intel systems are said to have used a 32 GiB DDR5-6400 memory kit with CL34 timing. Which mainboards the benchmarks were made on remains a secret.

Such excess performance could be explained by a higher number of cores (24c/32t) and higher clock speeds. Because the screenshots also show that the Core i9-13900K achieves a clock rate of 5,716 MHz with single-thread performance and 4,611 MHz with 16 threads. Only 5021 and 4060 MHz are achieved on the Alder Lake side. Meanwhile, the maker is expected to unveil its new generation Raptor Lake CPUs at the September 27 “Intel-ON” event and launch the first processor(s) in October.

Source: Oneraichu on Twitter via Videocardz



Reference-www.pcgameshardware.de