Wednesday, December 19th 2012

Intel Core i7 "Haswell" M-Series Notebook CPU Lineup Detailed

Intel's Core i7 "Haswell" line of high-performance mobile processors will launch around roughly the same time as its first desktop counterparts, in April 2013. The April launch will consist of three models, which occupy conventional TDP ratings, making them fit for performance/gaming classes of notebooks, they're not quite Ultrabook-material.

Leading the pack is the Core i7-4930MX Extreme Edition, which enables nearly every component on the silicon. The quad-core chip features HyperThreading, which enables 8 logical CPUs, 3.00 GHz clock speed with 3.90 GHz maximum Turbo and 3.70 GHz all-core Turbo, new Intel HD 4600 Graphics clocked at 400 MHz with 1350 MHz maximum boost, 8 MB L3 cache, and 57W TDP.
Next up, is the Core i7-4900MQ, another quad-core chip featuring HyperThreading, 2.80 GHz clock speed with 3.80 GHz maximum Turbo and 3.60 GHz all-core Turbo, the same HD 4600 graphics as its bigger sibling, 8 MB L3 cache, and 47W TDP. Lastly, there's the Core i7-4800MQ, which features just a notch-lower clock speeds than the i7-4900MQ, at 2.70 GHz with 3.70 GHz maximum Turbo and 3.50 GHz all-core Turbo; but lower L3 cache amount, at 6 MB. The TDP is unaffected at 47W.
Source: VR-Zone
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19 Comments on Intel Core i7 "Haswell" M-Series Notebook CPU Lineup Detailed

#1
Jack1n
Wow thats a pretty high turbo clock.
Posted on Reply
#2
Phobia9651
Why do they need 2 separate suffices (MX and MQ), when only the clockspeeds differ? Or am I overlooking something?
Posted on Reply
#3
btarunr
Editor & Senior Moderator
urza26Why do they need 2 separate suffices (MX and MQ), when only the clockspeeds differ? Or am I overlooking something?
MX is Extreme Edition quad-core, MQ is non-Extreme quad-core.
Posted on Reply
#4
Phobia9651
btarunrMX is Extreme Edition quad-core, MQ is non-Extreme quad-core.
In other words it's just marketing jazz, since the extreme edition has no significant advantage over the regular quad-cores, like for instance an unlocked multiplier or better IGP.
Posted on Reply
#5
Jack1n
urza26In other words it's just marketing jazz, since the extreme edition has no significant advantage over the regular quad-cores, like for instance an unlocked multiplier or better IGP.
The MX has the 4600IGP while the MQ has the 4000.
Posted on Reply
#6
bencrutz
Jack1nThe MX has the 4600IGP while the MQ has the 4000.
no, they are having the same 4600 IGP, read up, or look at the tabel ;)
Posted on Reply
#7
Aquinus
Resident Wat-man
Wow! 57-watt TDP is a little high for a mobile chip, don't you think?
Posted on Reply
#8
wrathchild_67
AquinusWow! 57-watt TDP is a little high for a mobile chip, don't you think?
It would make a pretty sweet low power gaming chip on one of those ITX boards that accept mobile processors. Unfortunately, the mobile chips cost a lot more than a similar performing desktop equivalent and likewise, the necessary motherboard costs two to three times as much as well.
Posted on Reply
#9
MadMan007
wrathchild_67It would make a pretty sweet low power gaming chip on one of those ITX boards that accept mobile processors. Unfortunately, the mobile chips cost a lot more than a similar performing desktop equivalent and likewise, the necessary motherboard costs two to three times as much as well.
Mobile-on-desktop doesn't make much sense any more with desktop chips available down to 35W TDP.
Posted on Reply
#10
devguy
MadMan007Mobile-on-desktop doesn't make much sense any more with desktop chips available down to 35W TDP.
*Sniff* <misses the days of the Athlon XP 2500+ M>
Posted on Reply
#11
wrathchild_67
MadMan007Mobile-on-desktop doesn't make much sense any more with desktop chips available down to 35W TDP.
There is no 35W desktop chip that is even half as powerful as that 57W mobile chip.
Posted on Reply
#12
Aquinus
Resident Wat-man
wrathchild_67There is no 35W desktop chip that is even half as powerful as that 57W mobile chip.
I would hope not. That 57W chip hasn't been released yet. :roll:

Also why would you need it as powerful? You're going to chew through that battery at least twice as fast. :confused:
Posted on Reply
#13
wrathchild_67
AquinusI would hope not. That 57W chip hasn't been released yet. :roll:

Also why would you need it as powerful? You're going to chew through that battery at least twice as fast. :confused:
It wouldn't be going into a laptop but an ultra portable desktop. There aren't any low wattage desktop chips that have the performance of this 57W mobile chip, hence if you wanted a small, low wattage, but extremely high performing PC you could build a desktop around this mobile chip. Pair this thing with a Geforce 690 in something like a Fractal Node case and you've got an absolute powerhouse that only eats about 400W at load and probably idles around 30-45W.
Posted on Reply
#14
Disparia
I suppose so... however, I'd be much happier with the i7-4770S and my pockets full of the money I didn't spend on a mobile chip and board :)
Posted on Reply
#15
Nordic
I want to see the lower end mobile chips. The low wattage what not. My laptop has an i3 2130 with hd3000. If I could get something haswell i3 with about a 1.8-2ghz I could keep my current performance level and get a longer battery life.
Posted on Reply
#16
Absolution
I wonder if the 4600 can compete with the trinity's graphics. But then again such a CPU wont be relying on the 4600 and will probably come with a high end mobile gpu.
Posted on Reply
#17
dwade
I just wish Intel would try to popularize Thunderbolt in mobile market.
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