Core i5-1350P Benchmarks Leak: Barely Beats Predecessor
Intel is set to unveil mobile versions of its 13th Generation Core ‘Raptor Lake’ processors in early 2023.Intel’s result Core i5-1350P CPU Registered in Primate Labs’ Geekbench 5 database ( note check), revealing the performance of the unit on this synthetic benchmark.
The Core i5-1350P is a 12-core processor with 4 high-performance Raptor Cove cores running from 1.90 GHz to 4.70 GHz and 8 energy-efficient Gracemont cores. This he is designed for a base power of 28W, but can draw up to 64W under heavy load (at least based on Intel’s P-series mobile product design).This CPU is his one of the mobile Raptor Lake processors that don’t get extra cores so Alder Lake parts (model i5-1250P In this case) is only enabled by a higher turbo clock and perhaps additional performance tuning by the PC manufacturer.
When installed in the yet-to-be-announced Acer TravelMate P614-53, the Core i5-1350P showed generally similar results to its predecessor. Of course, since we’re talking about laptops, a lot depends on the cooling and power plan used by the OEM.
Header Cell – Column 0 | Core i5-1350P | Core i5-1250P | Apple M2 | Apple M1 | Apple M1 Pro 8C |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
General specifications | 4P, 8E, up to 4.70 GHz | 4P, 8E, up to 4.40 GHz | 4P, 4E, up to 3.49GHz | 4P, 4E, up to 3.20 GHz | 6P, 2E, up to 3.22GHz |
Single Core | Integer | 1479 | 1424 | 1759 | 1597 | 1616 |
Single Core | Floating | 1781 | 1732 | 2083 | 1896 | 1896 |
Single Core | Crypto | 3812 | 3465 | 3021 | 2783 | 2812 |
Single Core | Score | 1686 | 1618 | 1919 | 1746 | 1760 |
multicore | integer | 8595 | 8618 | 8196 | 7013 | 8592 |
Multicore | Floating | 9605 | 9390 | 9840 | 8624 | 10460 |
Multicore | Crypto | 10232 | 11750 | 12964 | 10137 | 17028 |
Multicore | Score | 8980 | 9006 | 8928 | 7653 | 9574 |
Link | Link | Link | Link | Link | Link |
The new Core i5-1350P CPU outperforms its predecessor, the Core i5-1250P, in single-threaded integer, floating point, and crypto workloads by a small margin. It also beats its ancestors on multithreaded floating point workloads, but not on multithreaded integer and cryptographic tasks.
Compared to Apple’s M2, the new Core i5-1350P was beaten on single-threaded workloads, but managed to outperform the competition by up to 0.5% on multi-threaded tasks. Meanwhile, Apple’s 8-core M1 Pro beats Intel’s Core i5-1350P in all Geekbench 5 tests.
Given the fact that we’re dealing with pre-production hardware, we’ll refrain from drawing any conclusions about the Core i5-1350P here, but keep in mind that the new CPU is only clocked higher than the previous model. . Generally dramatically faster than the Core i5-1250P. Still, perhaps some notebook makers can come up with a better cooling system and run it at max clocks for significantly longer. This has a positive effect on real-world performance (but does not affect performance on Geekbench, a synthetic benchmark).
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