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Intel Hardware

Intel Axes 13th Gen Core i5, i7, i9 K-series CPUs 33

Tom's Hardware: Intel is discontinuing its boxed overclockable Core i5, i7, and i9 Raptor Lake CPUs. Every K-series chip in the lineup will be discontinued on May 24th, 2024, after which vendors will no longer be able to purchase them. Intel's product change document states that the last product discontinuance order date and non-cancelable/non-returnable cut-off points will start on May 24th, 2024, and final shipments will end on June 28th, 2024.

We don't expect 13th Gen K-series CPU supply to evaporate instantly but expect availability to gradually dissipate, along with price increases as vendors move to sell off all remaining overclockable Raptor Lake CPU inventory. That said, most 12th-Gen Alder Lake CPUs are still priced very competitively, even to this day, so we could potentially see the same behavior with these discontinued Raptor Lake CPUs (until stock inevitably runs out).
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Intel Axes 13th Gen Core i5, i7, i9 K-series CPUs

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  • is this news? (Score:4, Informative)

    by vux984 ( 928602 ) on Friday April 12, 2024 @04:57PM (#64390376)

    I mean... I built my i9 13900K series PC for xmas 2022. The 14900K has been out for 6 months now... who would be surprised that the earlier chips are being discoed?

    • Is this the gaming PC version of you find a dental floss that you really like, but if you want to buy more, you have to pay 10X price on Ebay?

  • My main machine is a I7 gen 3! The only reason you need more power day to day is to run Microsoft bloatware!
    • by vux984 ( 928602 )

      Nothing wrong with a gen3 i7, but if you want to have a system running a modern nvme SSD, and video card etc you do actually need a newer motherboard with a current chipset (pci express version, m2 slots, current bluetooth revision, etc etc) and that isn't going to be compatible with your gen3 i7.

      Now... does it need to be an i9? No. Certainly not. I could have spec'd an i5 and it would have been fine. But just like you are still running a gen3 i7 today, I fully expect this i9 based system to be perfectly s

  • I haven't felt the need to overclock my desktop CPU for maybe a decade now. Why do people even want to overclock anymore?

    Push power consumption way up for a couple percent of performance gain and risk stability issues? Is that 2 FPS really doing anything for you?

    • You may not have a use case for it, but you do touch on an interesting point. It's 2024. CPUs aren't fixed core devices running at a constant speed, and haven't been for a decade. These days CPUs will dynamically boost themselves to some threshold limit, thermal, power, etc. It's why changing cooling without touching a single other setting in your BIOS can have a material difference in benchmarks.

      The benefits to overclocking these days are slim.

      That said... I do have one machine with an unlocked processor h

    • by vux984 ( 928602 )

      I don't overclock it.

      I do like buying the K versions though; as they generally have all the features; are readily available when I'm doing builds, and the fact that intel is binning it as a K means that its not going to fall over if it gets a little warm on a workload.

  • Boxed vs. Tray (Score:4, Informative)

    by chx496 ( 6973044 ) on Saturday April 13, 2024 @04:44AM (#64391136)

    This only affects the boxed versions for now: https://www.intel.com/content/... [intel.com] Tray versions will still be available even after that date.

    The 12th gen K-series tray versions have not yet been discontinued, so I doubt that the 13th gen will be discontinued before that. The 11th gen (different mainboard socket than 12/13/14th gen) has been discontinued though, see https://www.intel.com/content/... [intel.com]

    That said, I can still find e.g. new 9th gen K-series CPUs on the market that have been discontinued quite a while back. And while Intel isn't producing them anymore, there's still enough stock available worldwide that if you really want one, you can get one. (Whether that's a good price-to-performance proposition nowadays is a different topic.)

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