Intel’s CEO Rumored To Visit TSMC Next Month As 14th Gen Meteor Lake Allegedly Pushed Back to End of 2023

Jul 8, 2022 at 05:01am EDT
Intel's CEO Rumored To Visit TSMC Next Month As 14th Gen Meteor Lake Allegedly Pushed Back to End of 2023

Intel's CEO is rumored to visit Taiwan's TSMC (Taiwanese Semiconductor Manufacturing Company) as reports indicate an alleged delay in the production of the 14th Gen Meteor Lake CPUs.

Alleged 14th Gen Meteor Lake CPUs Delay To Late 2023 May Force Intel CEO To Vist TSMC To Revise 3nm Production Plans

Just a few hours ago, we reported that Intel's 4 process node which will feature 14th Gen Meteor Lake as the flagship product, is scheduled for mass production in the second half of 2022. Now, it has been reported by DigiTimes in a follow-up post that Intel's CEO, Pat Gelsinger, might make a visit to Taiwan's TSMC to revise the plans for their 3nm production plans. The TSMC 3nm process node is expected to be utilized for the fabrication of the tiled-GPU that will be one of the four on-package chiplets for Meteor Lake. Following is a short summary of the report as posted by Twitter fellow, Retired Engineer:

Related Story AMD’s Marketing Chief Boasts ’15 Out Of 15′ On Amazon’s Best-Seller CPU Chart, Leaving Intel Without A Single Top Spot
FILE PHOTO: The logo of Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co (TSMC) is pictured at its headquarters, in Hsinchu, Taiwan, Jan. 19, 2021. REUTERS/Ann Wang

The report states that Intel CEO, Pat Gelsinger, will be visiting TSMC, which is based in Taiwan, next month for an 'emergency correction' of its own process production capacity plan for the next year. This will be Intel CEO's third visit to TSMC and the renegotiations mostly have to do with TSMC's 3nm process node which Intel had tapped for use on their Meteor Lake CPU's tiled-GPU. The tGPU is the codename for the tiled-graphics architecture which will be a separate chiplet from the main compute tile that is being fabricated on Intel's own 'Intel 4' or 7nm EUV process node.

Intel's 14th Gen Meteor Lake CPUs are said to be originally planned for launch in the first half of 2023 but that has allegedly been delayed to the second half of 2023 or even late 2023. So if Intel Meteor Lake chips suffer a delay, the company will have to pay a hefty price as the company had already signed an agreement with TSMC for the production outsourcing plans and was elevated to a 'heavenly king' status. Even more so, the company is allegedly being forced to continue not only with its 3nm Tiled-GPU design at TSMC but also shift the compute tiled to TSMC's 5nm or even 3nm process node which would mean that certain chips can end up being produced entirely at TSMC to save its own face and also save costs which it would otherwise have to incur from the delay.

An Intel Meteor Lake test chip from Fab 42. (Image Credits: CNET)

This is all just a rumor for now but recently leaked platform details for 13th Gen Meteor Lake CPUs confirm that the consumer launch is expected sometime in the second half of 2023. It is not exactly said when but a 2H 2023 will already be a delay if reports regarding Intel's plan to launch Meteor Lake CPUs in 1H 2023 are correct. Again, this is all just a rumor and we hope Meteor Lake CPUs go as planned without any production issues or delays.

Intel Mobility CPU Lineup:

CPU FamilyPanther LakeLunar LakeArrow LakeMeteor LakeRaptor LakeAlder Lake
Process Node (CPU Tile)Intel 18ATSMC N3BTSMC N3BIntel 4Intel 7Intel 7
Process Node (GPU Tile)TSMC N3E / Intel 3TSMC N3BTSMC 5nmTSMC 5nmIntel 7Intel 7
CPU ArchitectureHybridHybrid (Dual-Core)Hybrid (Triple-Core)Hybrid (Triple-Core)Hybrid (Dual-Core)Hybrid (Dual-Core)
P-Core ArchitectureCougar CoveLion CoveLion CoveRedwood CoveRaptor CoveGolden Cove
E-Core ArchitectureDarkmontN/ASkymontCrestmontGracemontGracemont
LP E-Core Architecture (SOC)DarkmontSkymontCrestmontCrestmontN/AN/A
Top Configuration (Compute Tile)4+8 (H-Series)4+4 (MX Series)6+8 (H-Series)
2+8 (U-Series)
6+8 (H-Series)
2+8 (U-Series)
6+8 (H-Series)
8+16 (HX-Series)
6+8 (H-Series)
8+8 (HX-Series)
Max Cores / Threads16/168/814/1414/2014/2014/20
AI NPUNPU5 (50 TOPS)NPU4 (48 TOPS)NPU3.5 (13 TOPS)NPU3 (11 TOPS)NPU2 (7 TOPS)NPU2 (7 TOPS)
Planned LineupCore Ultra 300Core Ultra 200VCore Ultra 200Core Ultra 10014th/13th Gen12th Gen
GPU ArchitectureXe3-LPG (Battlemage)Xe2-LPG (Battlemage)Xe-LPG+ (Alchemist)Xe-LPG (Alchemist)Iris Xe (Gen 12)Iris Xe (Gen 12)
Xe Cores (Max)12 Xe3 Cores8 Xe2 Cores8 Xe Cores8 Xe Cores96 EUs (768 Cores)96 EUs (768 Cores)
Memory SupportLPDDR5X-9600LPDDR5X-8533DDR5-5600
LPDDR5-7500
LPDDR5X-8533
DDR5-5600
LPDDR5-7400
LPDDR5X - 7400+
DDR5-5200
LPDDR5-5200
LPDDR5-6400
DDR5-4800
LPDDR5-5200
LPDDR5X-4267
Memory Capacity (Max)128 GB32 GB128 GB96 GB64 GB64 GB
Thunderbolt SupportTB5TB5TB5TB4TB4TB4
WiFi CapabilityWiFi 7WiFi 7WiFi 7WiFi 6EWiFi 6EWiFi 6E
TDP17-45W17-30WTBD7W-45W15-55W15-55W
Launch2H 20252H 20242H 20242H 20231H 20231H 2022

About the author: A Software Engineer by training and a PC enthusiast by passion, Hassan Mujtaba serves as Wccftech's Senior Editor for hardware section. With years of experience in the industry, he specializes in deep-dive technical analysis of next-generation CPU and GPU architectures, motherboards, and cooling solutions. His work involves not only breaking news on upcoming technologies but also extensive hands-on reviews and benchmarking.

Follow Wccftech on Google to get more of our news coverage in your feeds.

Deal of the Day