Details on Intel Tiger Lake-H laptop processors appear online

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Two unannounced Intel Tiger Lake-H CPUs have appeared on Geekbench. The CPUs have four cores with hyperthreading and a tdp of 35W. The chips will probably be announced at CES. 45W variants with more cores will follow later.

The laptop processors were noticed by Twitter user Tum_Apisak. These are an Intel Core i7-11370H and a Core i5-11300H. Both processors have four 10nm cores with eight threads and a tdp of 35W. The i7 variant gets a clock speed of 3.30GHz with a turbo frequency of 4.78GHz and 12MB of L3 cache. With the Core i5 model, base and boost clocks are respectively 3.11GHz and 4.38GHz with 8MB L3 cache.

Specifications of the first Intel Tiger Lake-H CPUs
Processor Cores / threads Clock speed Boost clock Tdp
Intel Core i7-11370H 4C / 8T, 10nm 3.30GHz 4.78GHz 35W
Intel Core i5-11300H 4C / 8T, 10nm 3.11GHz 4.38GHz 35W

Tum_Apisak shares different Geekbench results from both processors. In the results, the Core i7 variant achieves single-core scores of 1566 and 1572, with multicore results of 5065 and 5084. The Core i5-11300H scores slightly lower due to its slower clock speeds. That chip achieved single and multicore scores of up to 1440 and 4912.

The single-core results are comparable to those of AMD’s as-yet-unannounced Ryzen 9 5900HX laptop processor. Geekbench scores of that octacore CPU already appeared earlier this month, VideoCardz reports. The 5900HX achieved a single-core score of 1535 in Geekbench. The AMD CPU’s multicore score was 9015. AMD is expected to introduce its Ryzen 5000 laptop processors at CES in January.

Intel is also rumored to be introducing its first Tiger Lake-H laptop processors at CES, VideoCardz writes. This would only concern quadcores with a 35W tdp. 45W variants should follow in the second quarter. Those chips would have six or eight hyperthreading cores. The 45W chips would also receive turbo frequencies of up to 4.8GHz and 24MB of L3 cache, reports German tech site ComputerBase. Intel already released its first Tiger Lake-U processors in September, with TDPs from 9W to 15W.

Geekbench results of the Intel Core i7-11370H (left) and Core i5-11300H

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