Gigabyte X299X, TRX40 Motherboards Leak For Intel Cascade Lake-X, AMD Threadripper
With all of this HEDT goodness swirling around for PC enthusiasts, it should come as no surprise that motherboards for these new processors are starting to leak. Today, those leaks come courtesy of a slew of Gigabyte motherboards that were listed with the Eurasian Economic Commission (EEC).
Starting off with Cascade Lake-X, these processors will be backed by a new X299X chipset (which seems like an obvious upgrade from X299), and Gigabyte has four motherboards incoming that we know of at this point:
- X299X Aorus Master
- X299X Aorus Xtreme Waterforce
- X299X Designare EX
- X299X Designare EX-10G
Intel's 10th generation Cascade Lake-X family will reportedly consist of the following processors:
- Core i9-10900X (10-core/20-thread)
- Core i9-10920X (12-core/24-thread)
- Core i9-10940X (14-core, 28-thread)
- Core i9-10980XE (18-core/36-thread)
So far, we've seen leaked benchmarks for both the Core i9-10900X and the Core i9-10980XE. Intel is promising a relative performance-per-dollar uplift of anywhere from 1.74x to 2.09x over Skylake-X with these 14nm++ processors.
On the AMD side of things, AMD has five TRX40 motherboards that will be paired with upcoming third-generation Ryzen Threadripper TRX4 HEDT processors (7nm Zen 2):
- TRX40 Aorus Master
- TRX40 Aorus Pro WiFi
- TRX40 Aorus Xtreme
- TRX40 Aorus Xtreme Waterforce
- TRX40 Designare
Ryzen Threadripper TRX4 HEDT processors paired with the TRX40 chipset support quad-channel memory (DDR4-3200) with a total capacity of 256GB per channel. Up to 64 PCIe lanes are supported along with PCIe 4.0 and overclocking with this platform. Higher-end Ryzen Threadripper WRX8 processors will support 8-channel DDR4-3200 and up to 128 PCIe lanes.
The closing months of 2019 are shaping up to be pretty exciting for enthusiasts that are enamored with these multi-core beast CPUs for content creation. Luckily, we'll have an abundance of riches between Intel and AMD offerings and potential deals to be had on current-generation SKUs.