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Kaby Lake-X and Skylake-X processors

Core i9 and Core X series processors

Intel has announced Kaby Lake-X and Skylake-X processors. Where the previous and current Broadwell-E platform had up-to 10 core processors (Core i7 6950X), Intel expanded on that with an up-to 18-core and thus 36-thread processor. Intel markets the new series as the Core X series, and is also adding a new denominator, the Core i9 series. The new processors are paired with a new chipset, X299 and socket LGA2066.
 

Intel-skylake-x-die-1

A die-shot of the 18-core Skylake-X series processor

Kaby Lake

Broadwell-E

Kaby Lake-X

Skylake-X

CPU cores

4

6, 8, 10

4

6, 8, 10, 12, 14, 16,18

Cache

8MB

Up to 25MB

8MB

13.75MB

PCIe support

PCIe 3.0 (16 lanes)

PCIe 3.0 (40/28 lanes)

PCIe 3.0 (16 lanes)

PCIe 3.0 (44/28 lanes)

Integrated graphics

Yes

No

No

No

TDP

95W

140W

112W

140W

Socket

LGA 1151

LGA 2011-v3

LGA 2066

LGA 2066

Chipset

Z270

X99

X299

X299

Memory support

Dual-channel DDR4

Quad-channel DDR4

Dual-channel DDR4

Quad-channel DDR4


Architecture changes

The new Core i9 series processors are based upon the Skylake architecture that you know from the socket 1151 parts but merely scaled upwards. The processor series is fabbed at 14nm. Despite being based on the Skylake architecture, there are some changes to address. IPC has been improved meaning the number of instructions per clock-cycle has been improved. According to Intel, Skylake-X will see an up-to 8% performance increase in IPC. It’s always hard to tell how correct that number is, as Intel in the past simply increased clock frequencies and called that an IPC increase. That, opposed to expensive architecture changes in caches and so on. However, Intel did change its caches, the L2 cache, for example, has been increased from 256 kB to 1 MB per core, which really is significant. However, relative to that the L3 cache was 2.5 MB and now is 1.375 MB per core, which is smaller compared to Broadwell-E. Intel thus tweaked and balanced out the L2 and L3 caches. With the new processors, you will also see two Turbo modes dubbed 2.0 and 3.0. We’ll keep it simple, but basically, with Turbo mode 3.0 fewer threads will clock higher. E.g. for a low threaded application a processor could boost with 2 cores to, say, 4.5 GHz. Whereas when Turbo mode 2.0 kicks in, it would do, say, 4 threads at 4.2 GHz. Intel also stepped away from the aging ringbus architecture and is now using a mesh design for inter-component communication. 

A New Processor New Socket

The new Skylake-X processor series will bring Socket 2066 to the new X299 chipset platform. Intel is to release Skylake-X and Kaby Lake-X at the same time. The difference is simple, Skylake-X can offer 18, 16, 14, 12, 10, 8 and 6 core processors (+ threads). The other (Kaby Lake-X) remains to be a quad-core part. So though Kaby Lake-X processors will physically fit onto the X299 they, however, end up being just a dual-channel memory part. 
 

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A new socket, LGA2066, and yes -- that means that once again you have to purchase a new motherboard. This chipset will be called X299, it will offer dual-channel memory for Kaby Lake-X processors, and for the Skylake-X processors you get quad-channel support (up-to 2667 MHz). And yes, that means from the four to eighteen-core procs, they will all fit the (expensive) X299 motherboards. There are some changes that you will need to be aware of. First off, the DMI interface (the IO interconnect in-between the processor and chipset) is getting more bandwidth, roughly 4 GB/s. That means you’ll have more PCIe lanes available for other connections in the IO like SATA, M.2, USB and so on. This is needed as Intel still did not embed USB 3.1 Gen 2 or Thunderbolt 3 inside their processors and thus the motherboard partners rely on external 3rd party chips (and this connection) for such implementations. The X299 chipset however does offer Gen 1 USB 3.1 ports.

The processor and PCI-Express

  • Kaby Lake-X Quad core procs get 16 PCI-Express 3.0 Lanes
  • Skylake-X six and eight core procs get 28 PCI-Express 3.0 Lanes
  • Skylake-X ten core procs get 44 PCI-Express 3.0 Lanes

The Kaby Lake-X procs will support dual-channel DDR4 and only 16 PCIe 3.0 Lanes, this will be 44 PCIe 3.0 Lanes for the most high-end Skylake-X models, not including the 6 and 8-core parts which will get 28 PCIe lanes. That means in the year 2017 with a 599 USD Core i7 7820K processor you still cannot get full x16 lanes each with two graphics cards. The new platform also offers support for Intel Optane

The chipset and PCI-Express

In-between the processor and the chipset there is an updated, faster DMI 3.0 link (equivalent to a full PCIe 3.0 x4 link). Now, you will have noticed that many motherboards will offer two or three M.2 storage units. So how would that work out with a x16 gen 3.0 processor you wonder? Well, the X299 chipset adds up-to another 20 to 24 PCIe Lanes Gen 3.0. It is here the extra 3rd part SATA / USB controllers and thus M.2 storage units can draw their bandwidth from. 

Let's chart things up in a table overview:
 

 

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ProcessorCores/ThreadsPCIe lanesBase ClockTurbo 2.0Turbo 3.0TDPPrice
Core i9 7980XE 18 / 36 44 2.6 GHz 4.2 GHz 4.4 GHz 165 W $1999
Core i9 7960X 16 / 32 44 2.8 GHz 4.2 GHz 4.4 GHz 165 W $1699
Core i9 7940X 14 / 28 44 3.1 GHz 4.3 GHz 4.4 GHz 165 W $1399
Core i9 7920X 12 / 24 44 2.9 GHz 4.3 GHz 4.4 GHz 140 W $1199
Core i9 7900X 10 / 20 44 3.3 GHz 4.3 GHz 4.5 GHz 140 W $999
Core i7 7820X 8 / 16 28 3.6 GHz 4.3 GHz 4.5 GHz 140 W $599
Core i7 7800X 6 / 12 28 3.5 GHz 4.0 GHz na 140 W $389
Core i7 7740X 4 / 8 16 4.3 GHz 4.5 GHz na 112 W $369
Core i5 7640X 4 / 4 16 4.0 GHz 4.2 GHz na 112 W $242

A lot is said and stated about the new line-up, it’s a bit of a confusing series of processors where Intel uses not one, but two architectures (Kaby Lake-X / Skylake-X and 6 to 18 cores) on one chipset. Next, to that, we now have to add the Core i9 series, which honestly will see two lines as well, the Core i9 X series and the Core i9 Extreme series.

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