Intel Comet Lake leak details next-gen CPU range with 10-core flagship capable of 5.1GHz boost

INSUBCONTINENT EXCLUSIVE:
Intel’s next-gen Comet Lake-S desktop processors have been revealed in a major leak detailing the purported full line-up, and providing
info on exactly how fast some of these chips will be.We should state upfront that these are alleged CPU and spec details, which we can’t
be sure of, and we need to treat any leak like this with a suitable degree of caution.That said, Wccftech seems to have got hold of some
Intel slides which are very revealing when it comes to the chip giant’s 10th-gen desktop processors based on a refinement of its 14nm++
process, which will supposedly be headed up by a 10-core (20-thread) as previously rumored.That would be the Intel Core i9-10900 which
purportedly runs with a base clock of 3GHz and Turbo to 5.1GHz (that’s presumably single-core boost), and it has 20MB of cache (no clock
speed details are provided for the unlocked K version of this chip, by the way).Also, as previously speculated, there is hyper-threading
throughout the entire 10th-gen Core desktop family, from the Core i3 upwards
The Core i3-10100 is a quad-core part with eight-threads and a base clock of 3.2GHz with Turbo to 3.8GHz (allegedly – take that as read
for everything in this report, of course).Intel’s Core i7-10700 will apparently sport 8-cores and 16-threads with a base clock of 3GHz and
Turbo to 4.8GHz
And the Core i5-10500 runs with six-cores and 12-threads with a base clock of 3.2GHz and Turbo to 4.3GHz.Pentium chips remain dual-core CPUs
with four-threads (and the Celeron processors at the very bottom of the 10th-gen range don’t get hyper-threading).Comet Lake-S will
support up to 40 PCIe 3.0 lanes, and comes with a new CPU socket (LGA 1200), so will also require a motherboard upgrade.Another leaked Intel
slide gives a taster of performance, with an apparent 8% improvement in Windows applications compared to Intel’s predecessor 9th-gen chips
(that’s as measured under SYSmark 2014 SE).There’s a bigger boost in multi-thread compute performance with an 18% increase (going by the
SPECint benchmark).TDPs will allegedly be 65W down the Core range for these chips (although the K variants will, of course, draw more power
– although how much more isn’t specified in this spillage).While this seems to be a pretty full picture of what we can expect, as ever,
we must be wary of placing too much trust in any early leaks.However, judging from what we can see here, the Core i9-10900 looks an
impressive performer – particularly given that alleged headline Turbo speed of 5.1GHz, which as noted is presumably single-core.But
perhaps more interest and focus will be placed on the mainstream Core i5-10500 six-core CPU which looks to offer a 100MHz uptick on the Core
i5-9600 in terms of base clock speed, albeit with slightly slower (300MHz lower) Turbo – but then the unlocked version could offer some
potentially tempting overclocking performance.And naturally, a great deal will depend on exactly how Intel prices these chips when they
emerge, which according to the rumor mill will be in the first quarter of 2020
However, if Intel’s recent huge price cuts in the high-end desktop processor arena are anything to go by, we can but hope we’re in for a
pleasant surprise…It’s certainly clear that Intel needs to do something to stop the rot in the enthusiast desktop CPU market, where
AMD’s Ryzen is currently running away with the game.