We recently saw the launch of the consumer Cascade Lake high-end desktop processors last week, featuring up to 18 cores at a low launch price. This week Intel is launching the professional versions of those processors, focused on workstations. The W-2200 family is an upgrade over the older W-2100 family, offering more frequency, more memory support, faster memory support, and a more affordable pricing structure.

The Xeon W family is Intel’s answer to the Workstation market. Intel sees the workstation market slightly differently to AMD, in that it sees workstations as mission critical hubs for commercial and corporate workflows. Users that require workstations, for Intel, require full uptime, full performance, and full support for a wide array of applications and hardware integration. Even though there might be end-users that require this level of hardware stability, the main focus for Intel is in these commercial and corporate deployments. This is why the company splits up its Core X family for consumers and end-users/enthusiasts, while Xeon W focuses more on the B2B clientele.

Intel currently runs two processor lines on Xeon W. The W-2000 family uses the same HEDT socket as the current Core X family, with the same size processors and memory channels, but with ECC support, more memory support, features like vPro, VROC, and also RAS capabilities. The W-3000 family, new for Cascade Lake, sits on the Xeon Scalable LGA3647 socket, and features more PCIe lanes, more memory support, and similar ECC/vPro/RAS capabilities. W-3000 also comes with a price premium, but at the high-end offers more cores.

For the new W-2200 family, we have the following:

Intel Xeon W-2200 Family
AnandTech Cores
Threads
Base All
Core
TB2 TB3
Max
DDR4 TDP Price
(1ku)
W-2295 18C / 36T 3.0 3.8 4.6 4.8 2933 165 W $1333
W-2275 14C / 28T 3.3 4.1 4.6 4.8 2933 165 W $1112
W-2265 12C / 24T 3.5 4.3 4.6 4.8 2933 165 W $944
W-2255 10C / 20T 3.7 4.3 4.5 4.7 2933 165 W $778
W-2245 8C / 16T 3.9 4.5 4.5 4.7 2933 155 W $667
W-2235 6C / 12T 3.8 4.3 4.6 - 2933 130 W $555
W-2225 4C / 8T 4.1 4.5 4.6 - 2933 105 W $444
W-2223 4C / 8T 3.6 3.7 3.9 - 2666 120 W $294

These prices are approximately half of the previous generation, perhaps to be in line with the competition that are currently offering an extremely attractive perf/$ ratio. Frequencies and TDP values are the same as the Core X counterparts, and Intel states that Turbo Boost Max 3.0 is now available on four cores rather than just two.

Users might notice that there is no 16 core processor in the stack, similar to the Core X family. Intel states that this is because of the price difference between the 14-core and 18-core is slight that they don’t see a need to put another processor in that area. Some cynics might not that this stops direct comparisons to AMD’s 16-core offering.

Each of these CPUs has 48 PCIe lanes, supporting x16/x16/x16, and require motherboards with C422 chipsets (these CPUs are not compatible with X299 motherboards for segmentation reasons). The maximum memory support for most models is four channels at DDR4-2933, which drops to DDR4-2666 in 2 DIMMs per channel mode. These CPUs support RDIMMs and LRDIMMs, with up to 1 TB per socket, or 128 GB modules where available.

We asked Intel about retail availability, and they noted that they’re seeing a strong demand at retail, so we might expect to see more of them offered in retail packaging. That being said however, the number of compatible motherboards is still a very small number, and often region dependent.

These processors are set to enter the market sometime in November.

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  • duploxxx - Monday, October 7, 2019 - link

    The issue is that none of the large OEM embrace or dare to allign with AMD on a new workstation build with EPYC or THreadripper which would result in total demolishing of the intel monopoly in this business.... no options at all
  • duploxxx - Monday, October 7, 2019 - link

    half the price... ripoff for years
  • GreenReaper - Monday, October 7, 2019 - link

    Ryzen's like Opteron, back in '06 or '7 — long ago, but I remember...

    Crimson swirl and vert;
    Red and green competing.
    Thirteen years of heat...
    Big cats kept us gaming.
  • duploxxx - Tuesday, October 8, 2019 - link

    stating 1TB support.... as it was deliberately removed by Intel as if it is a feature....

    Marketing up side down.... limit artificially something, remove limit afterwards and call it an enhancement - feature
  • karmapop - Tuesday, October 8, 2019 - link

    I mean if you're an enterprise buyer looking for workstations for a particular workload with a specific set of applications, you're going to buy the fastest part, not necessarily the part with the best value.

    At the end of the day, the simple fact is that a large chunk of those applications still gain large benefit from Intel's clock and slight IPC lead, despite TR being able to offer great value in pure high-thread loads like rendering.

    It's very good to see AMD pushing hard on the pro-level stuff, as the more common they become, the more incentive software companies like Adobe will have to better optimize for that hardware. At least we can be thankful that pressure has finally forced Intel to start adjusting instead of completely abusing their dominant market position.
  • twtech - Thursday, October 10, 2019 - link

    If the workload can use a large number of threads, and you're not willing to spend say, $40k per workstation x the number of employees you have - even big corporations balk at that sort of thing - then AMD's chips do still have an advantage, even with slightly lower IPC.
  • notashill - Monday, October 7, 2019 - link

    Dell does sell some TR machines, too bad they're only in the form of ridiculous-looking "gaming" machines where TR makes no sense.
  • edzieba - Tuesday, October 8, 2019 - link

    OEMs build what they have demand for. Plus for Hyperscale deployments everyone is moving towards OCP-type custom boards and skipping OEMs entirely.
  • twtech - Thursday, October 10, 2019 - link

    I suspect that they are getting big discounts from Intel in exchange for both buying in bulk, and using Intel as an exclusive supplier for workstations. They also know that most enterprise customers pick a vendor such as Dell or HP and use them as an exclusive source for simplicity, support, and maintenance reasons.
  • kpb321 - Monday, October 7, 2019 - link

    I think you've got a typo in your article. You said " Intel sees the workstation market slightly differently to AMD, in that it sees workstations as mission critical hubs for commercial and corporate workflows. " but I think you meant " Intel sees the workstation market slightly differently to AMD, in that it sees an excuse for artificial market segmentation and to charge businesses extra. "

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