Xeon E5 v4 SKUs and Pricing

As of press time we don't have precise Xeon E5 v4 pricing. But overall prices seem to be about 1-2% higher than the comparable Xeon E5 v3.. 

Intel Xeon E5 v4 SKUs
  Cores/Threads TDP Base Clockspeed Price
E5-2699 v4 22/44 145W 2.2GHz $4115
E5-2698 v4 20/40 135W 2.2GHz $3228
E5-2697A v4 16/32 145W 2.6GHz $2891
E5-2697 v4 18/36 145W 2.3GHz $2702
E5-2695 v4 18/36 120W 2.1GHz $2424
E5-2690 v4 14/28 135W 2.6GHz $2090
E5-2687W v4 12/24 160W 3.0GHz $2141
E5-2683 v4 16/32 120W 2.1GHz $1846
E5-2680 v4 14/28 120W 2.4GHz $1745
E5-2667 v4 8/16 135W 3.2GHz $2057
E5-2660 v4 14/28 105W 2.0GHz $1445
E5-2650L v4 14/28 65W 1.7GHz $1329
E5-2650 v4 12/24 105W 2.2GHz $1166
E5-2643 v4 6/12 135W 3.4GHz $1552
E5-2640 v4 10/20 90W 2.4GHz $939
E5-2637 v4 4/8 135W 3.5GHz $996
E5-2630 v4 10/20 85W 2.2GHz $667
E5-2630L v4 10/20 55W 1.8GHz $612
E5-2623 v4 4/8 85W 2.6GHz $444
E5-2620 v4 8/16 85W 2.1GHz $417
E5-2609 v4 8/8 85W 1.7GHz $306
E5-2603 v4 6/6 85W 1.7GHz $213

Meanwhile Intel's own performance estimations are not exactly exhilarating. Their estimates are based upon the almost perfectly scaling SPECrate benchmarks, and even these "perfect world" gains are simply modest, almost uninspiring in fact. We have said it before: this market desperately needs some competition if we want a new generation to bring more exciting improvements in performance-per-dollar metrics..

TSX and Faster Virtualization Benchmark Configuration and Methodology
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  • isrv - Sunday, April 3, 2016 - link

    i will belive that only after one by one comparison E5-1630v3 vs any of E5v4 composing wordpress front page for example.
    and so far, that's only a words about better caching etc...
  • simplyfabio - Monday, April 4, 2016 - link

    Could I ask one thing here? For a Workstation 3D, both for rendering and graphic/cad, (like illustrator, photoshop, autocad, 3dsmax), could be better have more core like the E5 2690 (considering all the turbo clock speed for each core active) ore better frequency, like the 1680? Thanks a lot to everyone, I can't find a nice review on this side of this CPUs...
  • grantdesrosiers - Monday, April 4, 2016 - link

    Not sure if anyone has pointed it out yet, but I think there is an error on the "Multi-Threaded Integer Performance" page, first graph. The 2695v4 says 22 cores, I believe it should be 18.
  • SanX - Monday, April 4, 2016 - link

    Poor Moore's law for workstations... 10-20% gain per 2-years generation.

    Think about it: there is no reason to upgrade for the next *** 5-10 generations *** or the next 10-20 years (!!!) when the processors will be only e-fold (2.71x) faster.
  • dragonsqrrl - Monday, April 4, 2016 - link

    The problem is your first assumption is already false.
  • Khenglish - Monday, April 4, 2016 - link

    I can't understand why the 4C and under turbo speeds are so slow on the v4 2699. A Broadwell with 55MB of cache being outperformed by a stock clocked Sandy Bridge is ridiculous. Why would this CPU not clock up to at least 4.2GHz with a 4 core workload, and say 4.4GHz for a 1 core workload? Hell it costs over $4000 and a massive TDP. You'd think Intel could take a minute to make the low core count speeds not terribly low.

    My workstation in my lab has a 1650 v3. My workloads peak between 4-8 cores. There is not a single CPU in the v4 lineup that would be an upgrade over the 1650 v3 despite the major power savings of 14nm and the cache size increase due to Intel's inability to set reasonable 8C and under frequencies.
  • Romulous - Monday, April 4, 2016 - link

    People who are serious about recompiling the same software often would probably use ccache and maybe even distcc. So your Linux kernel compile test is really only there for to show potential cpu performance.
  • LHL2500 - Tuesday, April 5, 2016 - link

    "It finds a home in the same LGA 2011-3 socket."
    Not according to Intel's website.
    http://ark.intel.com/compare/91754,81908
    In this comparison between a v3 and a v4 version of a E5-2680, the socket support for the two chips are different. The older version using the the FCLGA2011-3 and the newer version using FCLGA2011.
    So who is right? Anandtech or Intel?
    And it not just this chip. It's all the v4s.
    While I hope it's a typo on Intel's behalf, for now it doesn't look like the v4s are direct upgrades to the v3s. You will apparently need new motherboards.
  • xrror - Tuesday, April 5, 2016 - link

    That... is a bit disconcerting. I also like how "VID Voltage Range" for the v4 parts is simply listed as "0" ...
  • SeanJ76 - Tuesday, April 5, 2016 - link

    My School had the 3rd Generation Xeon's in their Workstations, they were slow as fuck@3.3ghz!! The consumer i7 4790K/6700K would run laps around these Xeon crap cpus!

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