Processors

An intel tiger lake processor and is seen in userbenchmark

Table of contents:

Anonim

A 10nm Intel Tiger Lake processor was recently discovered in the Userbenchmark database. However, it is important to take the performance results with tweezers, because Userbenchmark is not having the best reputation right now.

Unknown 4-core Intel Tiger Lake Y processor shown

Tiger Lake processors are the successors to the Intel Ice Lake (ICL) chips, which have yet to see the light of day. The Tiger Lake family of processors will be produced on Intel's 10nm process node and will most likely come with the next basic Willow Cove architecture and Xe graphics. Ice Lake will use the Gen11 (Generation 11) graphics processing unit, while Tiger Lake will use Gen12.

According to the UserBenchmark entry, we are dealing with a Y series chip, so it is essentially a low powered Tiger Lake chip designed for slim and compact handheld devices. The presence of the Gen12 LP (low-power) graphics engine and the use of LPDDR4x memory support this theory.

The unknown Tiger Lake Y (TGL-Y) processor has four cores and eight threads, runs on a 1.2GHz base clock and can go as high as 2.9GHz. At first glance, the operation clocks may seem disappointing. However, it could be an engineering piece, so there may still be room for improvement. Additionally, UserBenchmark notes that the Tiger Lake chip was used at 83%, so the boost clock could be significantly higher.

Visit our guide on the best processors on the market

When compared to the Coffee Lake quad-core i7-8559U processor, the Tiger Lake Y chip appears to be only 4%, 2%, and 8% slower in single-core, quad-core, and multi-core workloads, respectively. When it comes to competition, the Tiger Lake processor is reportedly 24% to 26% faster than the AMD Ryzen 7 3750H quad-core CPU in single-core and quad-core tests, respectively. It only lags behind the Ryzen 7 3750H in the multicore test by 1%.

Reports have claimed that Tiger Lake will bind to the Y and U series chips with a maximum of four cores.

Tomshardware font

Processors

Editor's choice

Back to top button