I have a 13900KF CPU in my machine. When I played CS2, I got a lot of stuttering. I did some research to find its caused by the E-Cores. I came across numerous threads that mention the E-Cores effect other games negatively as well. My conclusion was to completely disable E-Cores in BIOS (no longer an Intel fanboy after this).
After installing the new F15 BIOS for my Aorus Master Z790 motherboard to remedy the voltage issues these chips are having (another reason im not an Intel fanboy anymore), I decided to hold off overclocking this CPU for now.
When updating my scripts for Windows, one of my network tweak scripts has a tweak that requires adjusting thread count based on CPU. According to the spec sheet, the 13900KF has 32 threads.
I confirmed this using "msinfo32", and it saying "32 logical processors", which im assuming means threads. This is at default BIOS options and E-Cores enabled. I just went and tweaked my BIOS settings to what I normally use, and disabled the E-Cores, to discover that now msinfo32 reads "8 logical processors".
So im guessing that to get all 32 threads for the processor to function, E-Cores must be enabled. For reasons mentioned previously, Im keeping E-Cores disabled. My soul is crushed with Intels design philosophy. IMO, if a core isnt going to be a full performance P-Core, then dont have the core at all, but thats a different discussion.
What i want to confirm and clarify, is that with all 8 P-Cores enabled, and all E-Cores disabled, will there be only 1 thread per core? Meaning, with all E-Cores disabled, is the 13900KF an 8 core / 8 threads processor?
After installing the new F15 BIOS for my Aorus Master Z790 motherboard to remedy the voltage issues these chips are having (another reason im not an Intel fanboy anymore), I decided to hold off overclocking this CPU for now.
When updating my scripts for Windows, one of my network tweak scripts has a tweak that requires adjusting thread count based on CPU. According to the spec sheet, the 13900KF has 32 threads.
Intel® Core™ i9-13900KF Processor (36M Cache, up to 5.80 GHz) - Product Specifications | Intel
Intel® Core™ i9-13900KF Processor (36M Cache, up to 5.80 GHz) quick reference with specifications, features, and technologies.
ark.intel.com
I confirmed this using "msinfo32", and it saying "32 logical processors", which im assuming means threads. This is at default BIOS options and E-Cores enabled. I just went and tweaked my BIOS settings to what I normally use, and disabled the E-Cores, to discover that now msinfo32 reads "8 logical processors".
So im guessing that to get all 32 threads for the processor to function, E-Cores must be enabled. For reasons mentioned previously, Im keeping E-Cores disabled. My soul is crushed with Intels design philosophy. IMO, if a core isnt going to be a full performance P-Core, then dont have the core at all, but thats a different discussion.
What i want to confirm and clarify, is that with all 8 P-Cores enabled, and all E-Cores disabled, will there be only 1 thread per core? Meaning, with all E-Cores disabled, is the 13900KF an 8 core / 8 threads processor?
- Windows Build/Version
- Windows 11 27729
My Computer
System One
-
- OS
- Windows 11 27729
- Computer type
- PC/Desktop
- CPU
- i9 13900kf @5.7ghz all P-Cores
- Motherboard
- Aorus Master Z790
- Memory
- 32gb DDR5 7200
- Graphics Card(s)
- RTX 4090
- Other Info
- https://www.github.com/shoober420