Intel’s Next-Gen Lunar Lake CPU Spotted: Early Sample With 8 Cores, 3.9 GHz Boost Clocks, 16 MB L3 Cache

Intel’s Next-Gen Lunar Lake CPU Spotted: Early Sample With 8 Cores, 3.9 GHz Boost Clocks, 16 MB L3 Cache

 0
Intel’s Next-Gen Lunar Lake CPU Spotted: Early Sample With 8 Cores, 3.9 GHz Boost Clocks, 16 MB L3 Cache

A super-early Intel Lunar Lake CPU has been spotted within the SiSoftware database which packs 8 cores and up to 3.9 GHz boost clocks.

At Innovation 2023, Intel showcased the very first demo of an early Lunar Lake CPU which booted into the operating system and was running an AI workload, showcasing its stability. Now, the same Lunar Lake CPUs are showing up in online databases with one early sample making its way to the SiSoftware database.

The Intel Lunar Lake CPU sample was recently added to the database (3rd October 2023) so it may as well be the same chip that we saw during the event. As for specifications, the Lunar Lake ES chip comes packed with 8 cores which operate at a base frequency of 1.0 GHz and a boost frequency of 3.91 GHz for the P-Core and 2.61 GHz for the E-Core cluster.

It was recently reported that Lunar Lake CPUs will retain the Lion Cove P-Core and Skymont E-Core architecture which is the same that is used for Arrow Lake chips. It is also likely that the compute tile will be based on the 20A process.

The chip features 10 MB of L2 cache for the P-Core clusters and 4 MB of L2 cache for the E-Core clusters for a combined total of 14 MB L2 cache. The entire chip features a shared 16 MB L3 cache too. That's 25% higher L2 cache for the P-Cores versus the upcoming Redwood Cove cores which are equipped with 2 MB L2 cache per core. SiSoftware database is unable to report the correct P and E cores on Lunar Lake and the chip actually comes in a 4+4 configuration based on the cache count.

The Intel Lunar Lake CPU was running at an average power of 17W since the lineup is focusing on the mobility segment with improved performance/watt gains. The CPU itself was running on Intel's Reference Evaluation Platform with LPDDR5 memory and is marked as a LNL-M chip. The chip was tested in the Processor Cryptography (High Security) workload and despite its super early nature, it managed to come out on par with Intel's top Tiger Lake chip, the i7-1195G7, with similar bandwidth results.

Intel's Lunar Lake CPUs are targeting production in the second half of 2024 followed by a launch in 2025. The chips will be replacing Arrow Lake as the next-gen mobility family and we can expect a few big upgrades, especially in the graphics department which will be upgraded to the next-gen Xe2 or Battlemage architecture.

News Source: @Olrak29_

What's Your Reaction?

like

dislike

love

funny

angry

sad

wow