Discussion Intel Meteor, Arrow, Lunar & Panther Lakes Discussion Threads

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Tigerick

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As Hot Chips 34 starting this week, Intel will unveil technical information of upcoming Meteor Lake (MTL) and Arrow Lake (ARL), new generation platform after Raptor Lake. Both MTL and ARL represent new direction which Intel will move to multiple chiplets and combine as one SoC platform.

MTL also represents new compute tile that based on Intel 4 process which is based on EUV lithography, a first from Intel. Intel expects to ship MTL mobile SoC in 2023.

ARL will come after MTL so Intel should be shipping it in 2024, that is what Intel roadmap is telling us. ARL compute tile will be manufactured by Intel 20A process, a first from Intel to use GAA transistors called RibbonFET.



Comparison of upcoming Intel's U-series CPU: Core Ultra 100U, Lunar Lake and Panther Lake

ModelCode-NameDateTDPNodeTilesMain TileCPULP E-CoreLLCGPUXe-cores
Core Ultra 100UMeteor LakeQ4 202315 - 57 WIntel 4 + N5 + N64tCPU2P + 8E212 MBIntel Graphics4
?Lunar LakeQ4 202417 - 30 WN3B + N62CPU + GPU & IMC4P + 4E012 MBArc8
?Panther LakeQ1 2026 ??Intel 18A + N3E3CPU + MC4P + 8E4?Arc12



Comparison of die size of Each Tile of Meteor Lake, Arrow Lake, Lunar Lake and Panther Lake

Meteor LakeArrow Lake (N3B)Lunar LakePanther Lake
PlatformMobile H/U OnlyDesktop & Mobile H&HXMobile U OnlyMobile H
Process NodeIntel 4TSMC N3BTSMC N3BIntel 18A
DateQ4 2023Desktop-Q4-2024
H&HX-Q1-2025
Q4 2024Q1 2026 ?
Full Die6P + 8P8P + 16E4P + 4E4P + 8E
LLC24 MB36 MB ?12 MB?
tCPU66.48
tGPU44.45
SoC96.77
IOE44.45
Total252.15



Intel Core Ultra 100 - Meteor Lake



As mentioned by Tomshardware, TSMC will manufacture the I/O, SoC, and GPU tiles. That means Intel will manufacture only the CPU and Foveros tiles. (Notably, Intel calls the I/O tile an 'I/O Expander,' hence the IOE moniker.)



 

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511

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Cheer up, gloomy Intel folks!

Pat's confused CPU team managed to create at least one SKU that wins the efficiency crown in at least ONE benchmark

View attachment 111852
If you remove dlvr the MT power efficiency increases drastically though u have to give skymont team the credit its just they make worse decision again and again probably some product manager
 

Hulk

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Oct 9, 1999
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No, it is not my own rig, a friend wanted to build a new machine (he is still on a 6700K,1070Ti) and I convinced him to buy Arrow Lake, what a good friend I am I know. While assembling the machine I ran some benches.
You ARE a good friend. We all know that when you build a rig or even suggest what to buy you're on the hook for tech support for the life of the product!
 

511

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The refresh may be more intresting as we can compare I3 vs I4 on an same architecture to understand the gain of the process of the die is roughly 5% smaller from the nodes public info
 
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DavidC1

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That is a letdown. I guess Intel 3 doesn't have the transistor density for Lion Cove and Skymont to make it economically feasible.
It's basically to fill the low price segment that Lunarlake can't fill.

It looks like based on clocks it should be solid 20% faster in MT which is decent.
It‘s not good compare to 8845,but not bad for U15.
It's not too good price wise either.

Certainly not compared to the days when they could use a 80mm2 dual core die that is branded up to Core i3 and sold in tens of millions. Now you have packaging costs on top of needing various sized dies, one which is big as a single die back then.

Of course compared to Lunarlake it might be cheap, but that's not saying much. To the finance company known as "Intel" it's basically choosing between urine and feces to step on.
 
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511

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Jul 12, 2024
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That is a letdown. I guess Intel 3 doesn't have the transistor density for Lion Cove and Skymont to make it economically feasible.
I don't think that's the reason it's HP Libraries (3-3) which are pretty much on par in between nodes(Intel 3 and N3E) as for LNC it is a regression vs RWC in some areas for skymont you have to ask intel cause it would have been on par with N3B
as for cheaper option it would be fine for the 800$ market
 
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LightningZ71

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With 2-300mhz boost improvement, it should be about 5% better in single core benchmarks too. The E cores boost speeds, notably all-core boosts are up a good bit. It remains to be seen if they raised the ring bus speeds as they were quite low on OG Meteor Lake as they could be an issue for the MT scores...
 

511

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The biggest improvements are base speed with the boost speed can't show their worth due to OEMs bad practices like cheaping out on paste Optimizations
 

Hulk

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I don't think that's the reason it's HP Libraries (3-3) which are pretty much on par in between nodes(Intel 3 and N3E) as for LNC it is a regression vs RWC in some areas for skymont you have to ask intel cause it would have been on par with N3B
as for cheaper option it would be fine for the 800$ market
Losing Lion Cove isn't a big deal but not including Skymont is a big hit in performance.
 

LightningZ71

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Mar 10, 2017
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Even at the improved density (if any) that Intel3 brings, there wouldn't be physically enough room on the package substrate to fit a die large enough to hold 8 Skymont cores with the required P cores. Also, consider that part of why Arrow Lake is so dependent on the performance of Skymont is that Lion Cove doesn't have HT enabled. The P cores on Meteor lake DO have HT. Faster E cores coupled with faster P cores will make a notable difference in MT.
 

SiliconFly

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Mar 10, 2023
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It's a portable core made with industry standard EDA tools. There's no "node in mind".
Even though it's portable (node agnostic), it still takes a significant amount of (engineering) effort, time & money to fab it in a new node. Time & money is something Intel doesn't have at the moment.

All modern cores are definitely designed with node in mind, regardless of portability to other nodes.
Modern cores are mostly portable across nodes. But sadly, portable doesn't mean easy and/or cheap in this context.
 
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adroc_thurston

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All modern cores are definitely designed with node in mind, regardless of portability to other nodes.
No.
Intel picked N3 because it was the best node available. That's it!
Even though it's portable (node agnostic), it still takes a significant amount of (engineering) effort, time & money to fab it in a new node
Nope, someone like ARM serves reference physical implementations yearly for a whole bunch of cores, for a pile of very different nodes.
 

SiliconFly

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Mar 10, 2023
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No.
Intel picked N3 because it was the best node available. That's it!

Nope, someone like ARM serves reference physical implementations yearly for a whole bunch of cores, for a pile of very different nodes.
Those maybe generic designs. From what I gather, a complex core like LNC needs to be optimized for each node if it needs to hit higher performance. Some of the structures may need rework to squeeze out every last drop of performance the libraries have to offer, or to hit higher frequencies. I don't remember who exactly said this, but I remember reading that no designs can be made 100% node agnostic.
 
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