Twitter tech treasure hunter HXL, AKA @9550pro has uncovered an interesting forum post where PC enthusiasts are discussing early findings from tests of Intel Rocket Lake-S CPUs. These 11th gen Core desktop processors aren’t due to be released until the end of March but ChipHell forum user ‘Enthusiastic Citizen’ asserts he has been testing the Rocket Lake i9-11900K already. The results aren’t that pretty with regard to thermal performance…
Throughout the stability test the Rocket Lake Core i9 appears to have hit and stayed at a toasty 98°C. Yes, that’s high but making it worse is that the user says that the CPU was cooled by an ‘entry level’ 360mm AiO liquid cooler during the tests. The CPU wasn’t overclocked, just run at stock.
At this early stage there could be lots of reasons for this sub-optimal thermal performance. The ChipHell user mentioned the likelihood of BIOS issues. Another point to note is the AVX-512 functions under test generate a lot of heat in previous gen processor families too. These instructions are used to accelerate scientific simulations, financial analytics, artificial intelligence (AI)/deep learning, 3D modelling and analysis, image and audio/video processing, cryptography and data compression – so you might not usually hit them this hard for sustained periods – depending upon your PC usage.
Unfortunately, everyone will have to wait until late March for independent third party Rocket Lake CPU tests from trusted sources.