Intel’s 6th Gen Skylake Conclusions

The new 6th Generation Skylake platform from Intel has launched today, and as part of the package there are two new processors, the Core i7-6700K and the Core i5-6600K, a new Z170 motherboard chipset with corresponding motherboards, and also a new market for DDR4 DRAM. The purpose of the Skylake platform launch is to update the mainstream PC market segment for the purposes of better performance and enhanced connectivity.

What is Skylake?

Skylake is a new processor architecture based on Intel’s 14nm process using the newest generation of their FinFET lithographic technology, and the two overclockable K series CPUs are the first processors to be released into the wild. For some this is mildly confusing, given that Intel launched Broadwell for desktop (a die shrink "tick" from 22nm to 14nm) only a couple of months ago. Broadwell has only acted as a minor stopgap measure, fulfilling the requirements of an upgradable platform and taking the crown of the best integrated graphics processor for a socket. As a result of that minor role, a number of users will see Skylake more as an upgrade from Haswell, the last mainstream processor family that had a long market shelf life.

For this launch and review, details about Skylake have been relatively rare to come by even in Intel’s own press documents, and we are set to hear more details at Intel’s Developer Forum in mid-August. Nonetheless, we have been able to determine that Skylake has a raft of updates, focusing on fixed function hardware to accelerate certain workloads as well as decoupling the CPU and PCIe frequency domains on the silicon to allow for more precise overclocking.

The platform changes as well. The voltage regulators inside Haswell CPUs move back out on to the motherboard as they generated too much heat inside the CPU. This is good for overclockers, but means the required components on Z170 motherboards, and price, has the potential to go up. The Z170 chipset is the sole chipset being released today, with others coming later in the year. Z170 features an upgrade to DMI 3.0, giving faster CPU-to-chipset bandwidth and enabling a 26-lane high speed IO hub. Of these lanes, 20 can be configured for PCIe lanes under a strict set of rules, giving access to the potential for more functionality on board. Most motherboards being launched today will use these lanes to provide M.2 slots, USB 3.1 Gen 2 ports via controllers, extra networking, extra PCIe slots and SATA Express connectivity. In our motherboard overview we have details on over 55 motherboards to look through.

The Results

Overall, Skylake is not an earth shattering leap in performance. In our IPC testing, with CPUs at 3 GHz, we saw a 5.7% increase in performance over a Haswell processor at the same clockspeed and ~ 25% gains over Sandy Bridge. That 5.7% value masks the fact that between Haswell and Skylake, we have Broadwell, marking a 5.7% increase for a two generation gap.

In our discrete gaming benchmarks, at 3GHz Skylake actually performs worse than Haswell at an equivalent clockspeed, giving up an average of 1.3% performance. We don’t have much from Intel as to analyze the architecture to see why this happens, and it is pretty arguable that it is noticeable, but it is there. Hopefully this is just a teething issue with the new platform.

When we ratchet the CPUs back up to their regular, stock clockspeeds, we see a gap worth discussing. Overall at stock, the i7-6700K is an average 37% faster than Sandy Bridge in CPU benchmarks, 19% faster than the i7-4770K, and 5% faster than the Devil’s Canyon based i7-4790K. Certain benchmarks like HandBrake, Hybrid x265, and Google Octane get substantially bigger gains, suggesting that Skylake’s strengths may lie in fixed function hardware under the hood.

In full speed gaming benchmarks we have some situations that benefit from Skylake (GRID on high end graphics cards) and others that drop (Mordor on GTX 770), but the important aspect to consider is despite Skylake supporting both DDR3L and DDR4 memory, our results show that even with a fast DDR3 kit, a default-speed DDR4 set of memory is still worth upgrading to. On average there’s a small change in performance in favor of the DDR4 (especially in integrated graphics), but DDR4 confers benefits such as more memory per module and lower voltages to aid power consumption

A quick turn to the overclocking situation on Skylake: from our small sample set, most of the CPUs achieved 4.6 GHz when pushing and 4.5 GHz comfortably, including the retail sample that had 4.5 GHz. Speaking to other reviewers, their results match us or even slightly better our own, with one report of a 5.0 GHz gem of a processor. From our testing, Skylake seems to have more of a temperature barrier than a voltage barrier, so increasing the cooling seems to be the task of the day here to get the high frequencies.

With all that, I’m going to make a bold statement.

Sandy Bridge, Your Time Is Up.

A large number of users invested into Intel based platforms during the Core 2 Quad, Nehalem and Sandy Bridge releases. Sandy Bridge was notable because it inferred a large performance gain at stock speeds, and with a good processor anyone could reach 4.7 GHz and even higher using a good high end cooler. With that, Intel has had a problem enticing these users to upgrade because their performance has been constantly matched by Ivy Bridge, Haswell and Broadwell – for every 5% IPC increase from the CPU, an average 200 MHz was lost on the good overclock and they would have to find a good overclocking CPU again. There was no great reason, apart from chipset functionality to upgrade.

That changes with Skylake.

From a clock-to-clock performance perspective, Skylake gives an average ~25% better performance in CPU based benchmarks, and when running both generations of processors at their stock speeds that increase jumps up to 37%. In specific tests, it is even higher.  When you scale up to a 4.5 GHz Skylake against a 4.7 GHz Sandy Bridge, the 4% frequency difference is only a tiny portion of that. There are other added benefits, such as the move to a DDR4 memory topology that has denser memory modules, as well as PCIe storage and even PCIe 3.0 graphics connectivity.

As I said above, Skylake is not necessarily the most ground breaking architecture over Haswell. It affords a 19% CPU performance gain over the i7-4770K and 5% over the i7-4790K. There is a small minor issue with gaming that disappears when you use synthetics, but only to the tune of a couple of percentage points. For that minor hit, the package combo of processor, chipset and DDR4 should be an intrigue in the minds of Sandy Bridge (and older) owners.

What Happens Now?

Next on the list for us is Intel’s Developer Forum in mid-August. Here Intel has said they will present details on their Skylake architecture and it will hopefully shed some further insight into what is going on under the hood with Skylake. We will have a full write up for you after the event.

There is still the rest of the Skylake stack to be released – non overclocking processors, low power processors, and the B/H/Q chipsets too. There is no official date on these except ‘later in the year’. We will also get to these when we have more information.

What You Can Buy: Gaming Benchmarks on High End GPUs
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  • Jaguar36 - Wednesday, August 5, 2015 - link

    I still don't see the point in upgrading from Sandybridge let alone anything newer. Its a big chunk of a cash for a new mobo, CPU and memory, all for what, 25%?
  • Cumulus7 - Wednesday, August 5, 2015 - link

    Exactly.
    Usually i suggest an upgrade if you get approximately twice the performance (+100%). But for 25%: forget it! Never!!!
  • colonelclaw - Wednesday, August 5, 2015 - link

    The other way of looking at it is that it's amazing how good the Sandy Bridge numbers hold up, that good ol' 2600k is one of Intel's all-time great CPUs. Be happy you backed a winner!
  • mrcaffeinex - Wednesday, August 5, 2015 - link

    I did and I am very happy. It frees up funds to focus on other parts that make a bigger impact like more RAM, a larger SSD, and of course a better video card.

    This is better than Haswell in several ways and I imagine the overclockers are going to have some fun since they have been given back more options than some of the previous generations. At least it looks like Intel is paying more attention to the enthusiasts this time around, even if they are not the largest target market.
  • Cellar Door - Thursday, August 6, 2015 - link

    Well, I'm glad I held back on the 2600K and 3770K and got haswell!! - So with this kind of reasoning, its a never ending circle.

    Look at the platform overall, the pcix storage, nvme compatibility, m.2 ports. USB 3.1 which will be all over the place a lot faster then people realize.

    At the same speed its 37% faster and "In specific tests, it is even higher" - a good clocking 6700K will be a nice upgrade for anyone with Sandy. Just like Haswell was for Nahelem users.

    Seems a perfectly justifiable upgrade.
  • Kutark - Sunday, August 9, 2015 - link

    Eh. I've been wanting an excuse to upgrade from my 2600k. I am an "enthusiast" and building PC's and such is my hobby. So, it's not always just simply the price/perf value proposition. Christmas is coming up and my nephew doesn't have his own PC yet, and also loves to play steam games (he usually does it at his grandparents). So, this gives me an excuse to build a new setup. I still have my GTX 760 laying around that i upgraded to a 980ti. So a 6700k setup would be a nice pairing with the 980ti and should realistically set me for 3-4 years.
  • kmmatney - Wednesday, August 5, 2015 - link

    I'm an i5 3570K owner. If I'm going to upgrade, I'd look for an i7-4790K (or even a i7 2600K) on Ebay before completely overhauling my system with this.
  • darkfalz - Wednesday, August 5, 2015 - link

    Even that's a waste of money unless you are doing a tonne of Handbrake.
  • mapesdhs - Wednesday, August 12, 2015 - link

    No, get a 2700K instead, they oc much better than the 2600K.

    2700K = 5GHz guaranteed, even with a simple TRUE and one fan (I use the ASUS M4E,
    built five so far).
  • tim851 - Wednesday, August 5, 2015 - link

    Agreed. Especially when you factor in that those 25% is peak performance. How often does the average user call on peak performance? I think the most common and frequent scenario for average users to need CPU power is gaming. And here, due to the fact that GPUs are the bottleneck, you won't even get 10%.
    From an enthusiast point of view, the last 4 years since Sandy Bridge have been disappointing. If not outright worrying.

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