Mr.Shehbaz Posted February 26, 2022 Posted February 26, 2022 Our sources had earlier reported that Intel's 11th Generation Rocket Lake-S Desktop CPUs will be compatible on the Z490 motherboard platform but MSI has further confirmed that even lower-tier 400-series motherboards will support Intel's next-generation processors. Intel 11th Gen Rocket Lake Desktop CPUs To Be Supported By Entry-Level 400-Series Boards Too The support is mentioned within documents from MSI which have been spotted by Momomo_US (via Videocardz). According to those, MSI plans to bring Rocket Lake CPU support all the way down to its H410 tier of motherboards. There's no doubt that other board manufacturers will also follow MSI and offer similar support on their own entry-level products. The document further lists down that Rocket Lake-S CPUs with 65W TDPs to be supported by entry-level motherboards. This makes sense since the entry-level boards won't be able to provide any overclocking capabilities that one gets on higher-end motherboards along with unlocked CPUs. It would also be a wise decision to support Rocket Lake on the entire 400-series platform and not just the higher-end ones since they all feature the LGA 1200 socket. At the same time, Intel will be releasing its 500-series chipset based motherboards with the LGA 1200 socket. The new boards are expected to hit retail shelves alongside the Rocket Lake lineup. A restriction of any sorts for users upgrading to Rocket Lake CPUs on their existing 400-series motherboards would be a major blow for the 400-series platform itself since that would mean it only offered longevity for a single CPU generation despite featuring the same socket. I believe that Intel and their partners don't want to go that route considering the blue team is going to be facing a heated battle with AMD's Ryzen 4000 'Vermeer' Desktop CPUs which will be based on the Zen 3 core architecture and supported by AM4 motherboards all the way back to the 400-series lineup (X470/B450). Intel Rocket Lake CPU Power & Current Ratings Detailed, Not All 400-Series Boards May Be Able To Support 11th Gen Chips While MSI documents say that H410 series motherboards will be able to support Rocket Lake-S CPUs, Techbang has posted what seems to be the first details of Rocket Lake-S power & current delivery design. According to the report, Rocket Lake-S will ship with the same VCC (Core) current rated at 245 Amps (Max) but will increase the current rating in every other department. It is said that motherboards have to comply with the 'Advanced Deployment' design to properly support Rocket Lake-S desktop CPUs. Other than VCC (Core), the VCCGT (Graphics) current is increased from 35A to 55A, the VCCSA (System Agent) is increased from 11.1A to 22.1A, VCCIO (I/O) is increased from 6.4A & split into three sub-tiers. It's 8.3A for the primary PCIe I/O, 3.4A for DDR, and 6.2A for the secondary PCIe controller which runs the single Gen 4 NVMe slot. The VDDQ (Memory I/O buffer or the DRAM voltage) has increased from 3.7A to 4.3Q while VCCPLL_OC is set to 0.25A from 1.17A on 10th Generation Comet Lake-S Desktop CPUs. Lastly, the power gate current ratings have also been increased to 2.3A and 0.9A respectively. You can see the power supply configuration for Intel's Rocket Lake CPUs in the following diagram more clearly.
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