ASRock Z790 Taichi review

Mainboards 328 Page 2 of 25 Published by

teaser

Raptor Lake/Z790 Chipset

Raptor Lake/Z790 Chipset

In September ’22 at Intel Innovation, Intel introduced the 13th generation of its Core processor family, led by the 13th generation Intel Core i9-13900K, their fastest-ever desktop CPU. Six unlocked 13th-generation Intel Core desktop processors are available, with clock speeds running up to 5.8 GHz over a maximum of 24 cores and 32 threads.  With that said, let’s look closely at the platform and then head into testing.


Cores

Clock Frequency

Cache

Power usage

Price


Intel

P

E

Base P

Turbo P

Base E

Turbo E

L2

L3

Base

Turbo

USD

Core i9-13900K

8

16

3.0GHz

5.8GHz

2.2GHz

4.3GHz

32MB

36MB

125W

253W

589

Core i9-13900KF

8

16

3.0GHz

5.8GHz

2.2GHz

4.3GHz

32MB

36MB

125W

253W

564

Core i7-13700K

8

8

3.4GHz

5.4GHz

2.5GHz

4.2GHz

24MB

30MB

125W

253W

406

Core i7-13700KF

8

8

3.4GHz

5.4GHz

2.5GHz

4.2GHz

24MB

30MB

125W

253W

384

Core i5-13600K

6

8

3.5GHz

5.1GHz

2.6GHz

3.9GHz

20MB

24MB

125W

181W

319

Core i5-13600KF

6

8

3.5GHz

5.1GHz

2.6GHz

3.9GHz

20MB

24MB

125W

181W

294

If you went with 12th-gen Alder Lake this year, you could upgrade to Raptor Lake. Intel is utilizing the same LGA1700 socket as before; most Z690 motherboards will handle 13th-generation CPUs. Along with the release date, Intel is introducing Z790 motherboards. You may utilize DDR4 or DDR5 memory regardless of the chipset as long as your motherboard supports the memory standard you want to use. Although several Z690 motherboards have already included 13th-generation CPU capability, most B- and H-series boards have not. You should check with your motherboard vendor to ensure that the next generation is supported.


Untitled-1



Chipset PCIe Express 3.0 Lanes

Up to 8

Chipset PCIe Express4.0 Lanes

Up to 20

Processor PCIe Lane Configuration Support

1x16+1x4 or 2x8+1x4

DMI

x8 Gen4

SATA 3.0 (6 Gb/s) Ports

Up to 8

USB 3.2 Gen 1x1 (5G) Ports

10

USB 3.2 Gen 2x1 (10G) Ports

10

USB 3.2 Gen 2x2 (20G) Ports6

5

The Z790 chipset offers additional PCIe Gen 4 downstream lanes. In addition to improved downstream connectivity, you gain an extra 20 Gbps USB 3.2x2 port. Z690 provides up to 12 downstream PCIe Gen 4 lanes and up to 16 downstream PCIe Gen 3 lanes; the Z790 provides up to 20 downstream PCIe Gen 4 lanes and up to 8 downstream PCIe Gen 3 lanes. Both chipsets employ DMI 4.0 x8 as the chipset bus (the connection between the processor and the chipset), with bandwidth comparable to PCI-Express 4.0 x8 (128 Gbps per direction). Z790 permits motherboard manufacturers to wire up to five M.2 NVMe Gen 4 slots to the chipset or deploy a more significant number of high-bandwidth onboard devices than with Z690; devices such as discrete USB4 host controllers, Thunderbolt 4 80 Gbps controllers, etc., in addition to a few PCIe Gen 4 slots.  On October 20, Intel will unveil the first six Raptor Lake processors. For instance, the Core i9-13900K is priced at $589, while the Core i7-13700K is marketed at $409. These are the exact costs Intel charged for its Alder Lake equivalents. Only the Core i5-13600K has increased in price. The suggested retail price for this CPU is $319, compared to $289 for the Core i5-12600K at launch.

Share this content
Twitter Facebook Reddit WhatsApp Email Print