Intel Core i5-12400 Early Review le qualifie de changeur de jeu

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The upcoming Intel Core i5-12400 processor could be a game changer in the mid-range, according to an early gaming performance review by Igor’s Lab, which landed simulated the chip by disabling the E-cores, and setting the right clock speeds and power values. Based on the smaller H0 silicon of “Lac Alder-S,” qui ne comporte physiquement que six “Crique d'Or” Cœurs de processeur, et non “Gracemont” Clusters E-core, the i5-12400 ticks at 2.50 GHz, et 4.40 GHz boost frequency, avec 65 W base power, et 117 W puissance maximale du turbo (Le processeur Intel Core i9-12900K récemment annoncé devrait être lancé le 4 novembre aux côtés du i7-12700K).

Testing reveals that this MTP value lends the processor some stellar energy-efficiency numbers, and the chip strikes a performance/Watt sweetspot. Igor’s Lab, cependant, recommends that for the best efficiency, the i5-12400 should be paired with DDR4 memory. In its testing, DDR4-3733 (with Gear 1) a été utilisé. Gaming benchmarks put out by Igor’s Lab shows that the Core i5-12400 trades blows with the AMD Ryzen 5 5600X “Zen 3” in a number of games, beating it in several of them by virtue of higher IPC of the “Crique d'Or” noyaux, and beating the i7-11700K “Lac de la fusée” 8-core/16-thread processor at a fraction of its power-draw. A word of caution, quoique, is that the i5-12400 was simulated on a C0 silicon, possibly the i9-12900K, and the real i5-12400 die may not have the same refinements or electrical characteristics. Even with the E-core cluster disabled, the L3 cache size isn’t the same (30 MB vs. 18 MB). Catch the review in the source link below.

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