I try to find photo of die shot of Alder Lake-s with 8-performance core and 4-efficient core that were in i7 gen 12 model 12700k, but as i go deep in the internet all i found just this photo of Alder Lake-s with 8- performance core and 8-efficient core that were in i9 gen 12 model 12900k,
Why i can find the photo? Does anyone haved it? Please share with me if you know anything regarding this
#Alder Lake die shot photo
5 messages · Page 1 of 1 (latest)
I think it should look like this. I just removed the labels from the second e core cluster and reduced the 3 MiB of L3 cache to 1MiB.
The 12700k and 12900k use the same die but the 12700k has one e core cluster disabled and the remaining e core cluster only has 1MiB of l3 cache.
i see they used the same die, but how from 16 core (12900k), they still can run and working with only 12 core (12700k), is there any source that you know that i can read? and one more thing how you remove the label what app did you used?
I used the clone stamp tool in GIMP to remove the labels.
You can read more about chip binning here
https://www.techspot.com/article/2039-chip-binning/
and here is a video from intel on the topic https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7fVU-m5TdFI
TechSpot
You bought a new CPU and it seems to run cool, so you try a bit of overclocking. The GHz climb higher. Did you hit the silicon...
Even when they’re based on the same architecture, each processor behaves a bit differently due to natural manufacturing variance. Enter the “binning” process, which sorts CPUs based on their individual capabilities. We talked to Intel Fellow Guy Therien to understand how and why silicon is graded and categorized before being shipped out to the m...
alright i will look into it, i was on edge when i dont found the photo and thought the core dont exist hahahah, thanks broskii you are the hero of the day!!!