• Welcome to TechPowerUp Forums, Guest! Please check out our forum guidelines for info related to our community.

DDR5 Memory Boosts Intel Raptor Lake Performance by up to 20% Compared to DDR4

AleksandarK

News Editor
Staff member
Joined
Aug 19, 2017
Messages
2,995 (1.06/day)
As we approach the launch of Intel's upcoming Raptor Lake desktop processors, we are getting more leaks of testing performed by system integrators and 3rd parties that have early access to the engineering sample (ES) chips. A few days ago, we saw an Intel Core i7-13700K CPU run Geekbench 5 benchmark with the older DDR4 memory on ASRock Z690 Steel Legend WiFi 6E. Today, we are seeing a similar test performed on the same processor, with ASRock Z690 Steel Legend WiFi 6E/D5 equipped with DDR5 memory. While the previous DDR4 testing used modules running at 3200 MT/s, the DDR5 testing uses 5200 MT/s rated DRAM with unknown timings and setup.

As far as performance goes, the single-core result of the 16-core Intel Core i7-13700K processor was 2090 points with DDR4, while DDR5 showed a slight regression of 2069 points. Of course, this could be attributed to the margin of error. As far as multi-core performance goes, the DDR4 testing managed to produce 16542 points, whereas the DDR5-equipped platform scored 19811 points. This is an immediate 20% performance uplift in multi-core score. It shows that all the cores present in Raptor Lake processors are starving for bandwidth, and a faster memory protocol can bring quite an improvement. As usual, we have to wait to confirm this information with our testing so that we can draw more conclusions.


View at TechPowerUp Main Site | Source
 
20% MT increase with DDR5 is nice!

It must be said that 3200 DDR4 is the lower bandwidth end of DDR4 you can get 4000/5000+ DDR4 kits today. that may close the some of the gap/performance to DDR5.
 
Last edited:
good to see DDR5 platform is starting to mature and gaining more performance
 
Well, that's what we have also seen on the Alder Lake benchmarks.

Great for productivity talks, for gaming not really. Yet. ;)
 
20% MT increase with DDR5 is nice!

It must be said that 3200 DDR4 is the lower bandwidth end of DDR4 you can get 4000/5000+ DDR4 kits today. that may close the some of the gape/performance to DDR5.

I think ddr5 works differently than ddr4 and is way more effective at the same clocks.
I can buy a 4400 ddr4 but that’s one way transfer speed while a similar ddr5 is two way at the same speed.

Where ram speed matters alder/raptor lake and zen 5 will be destroying all our am4 setups.
 
I think ddr5 works differently than ddr4 and is way more effective at the same clocks.
I can buy a 4400 ddr4 but that’s one way transfer speed while a similar ddr5 is two way at the same speed.

Where ram speed matters alder/raptor lake and zen 5 will be destroying all our am4 setups.
The article says/assumes that the DDR4 test was lower because it was bandwidth limited.
How much bandwidth did the CPU need to get that extra 20% performance in MT and could the same performance be possible with higher bandwidth DDR4 kits?
This can only be answered once additional tests are carried out.

We still dont know how much bandwidth starts bringing diminishing returns in performance. Overall quiet happy to see DDR5 shaping up to be much faster than DDR4
or maybe I should say New CPUs being able to make better use of higher memory bandwidths offered by DDR5.

Prices are acutally not too bad for 32GB DDR5 kits locally but still needs to come down more to become mainstream.
 
Last edited:
So nothing still about Z790 platform?
20% MT increase with DDR5 is nice!

It must be said that 3200 DDR4 is the lower bandwidth end of DDR4 you can get 4000/5000+ DDR4 kits today. that may close the some of the gap/performance to DDR5.
Quite true indeed, but the vast majority of those higher end DDR4 kits are 16GB, its very tough on IMC to run 32GB over 4800MHz in DDR4 world.
 
Another day another scintillating Crackong comment

I think the people with 690 DDR 5 boards are certainly going to see the best of Raptor Lake.
But Crack’s comment is right. Intel’s PR efforts go much further when it’s “hearsay”, “rumours” and supposed “leaks” that tech websites suck up and regurgitate.
 
if we dont know the timings used....is this really useful information?
 
Will be interesting to see which platform will gain more from ddr5- amd 7000 or intel 13.

Anyway, seem that ddr4 "clock" just made another push towards obsolete state
 
if we dont know the timings used....is this really useful information?

what do you mean by that? sure in CPU's you can be tricked when they use chillers or LN2 to make unrealistic results, but not with RAM
 
Another day another 'Intel Leak'
These PR stunt never stops
@TheLostSwede I didnt say it this time!!

I'd say both (sc/mc) resuslts are within the margin of error, the multi-core score is barely over it.
 
if we dont know the timings used....is this really useful information?

Nope, but you read the words Intel, Raptor Lake and +20% perf in one sentence today.

We did see similar things with Skylake back then.
 
But Crack’s comment is right. Intel’s PR efforts go much further when it’s “hearsay”, “rumours” and supposed “leaks” that tech websites suck up and regurgitate.
There would be many a boring tech forum if not for 'leaks'.
 
I'm running DDR5 6000 prepared for Raptor Lake. :D
For now I'm satisfied with my i7 12700K though, but a Raptor Lake CPU can be my last upgrade on Z690.
 
20% MT increase with DDR5 is nice!

It must be said that 3200 DDR4 is the lower bandwidth end of DDR4 you can get 4000/5000+ DDR4 kits today. that may close the some of the gap/performance to DDR5.
Yep, but also RL might have a better memory controller. Remember SKL and its frying mem controller?
 
if we dont know the timings used....is this really useful information?
We also don't know the gear ratio. It's a slim chance, but still not impossible, that Intel managed to push up the speed limit for Gear 1 to 5200, and the IMC melted only after the results were taken.
 
Will be interesting to see which platform will gain more from ddr5- amd 7000 or intel 13.

Anyway, seem that ddr4 "clock" just made another push towards obsolete state
As long as there is a platform that uses DDR4, its not obsolete until that platform is EOL. Its safer to say there will no new innovations to it.
 
if we dont know the timings used....is this really useful information?
Hi,
ddr5 latency off the charts but that is just a small detail same as ddr4 3200 verse 5200 is trivial and not worth questioning :laugh:
 
As long as there is a platform that uses DDR4, its not obsolete until that platform is EOL. Its safer to say there will no new innovations to it.
I use "another push towards obsolete state", so it is already a very safe statement :)
Just part of the regular cycle of tech that EOL is the, well, the end of it ;)
 
I'm running DDR5 6000 prepared for Raptor Lake. :D
For now I'm satisfied with my i7 12700K though, but a Raptor Lake CPU can be my last upgrade on Z690.
Hi,
I'd think you'd be more interested in another gpu at this point instead of another cpu.
 
Hi,
I'd think you'd be more interested in another gpu at this point instead of another cpu.

I think so, but I meant more like it's the last CPU gen I'm able to upgrade to on my Z690 platform.
 
Back
Top