We knew the Core i3 Ivy Bridge CPUs were coming, but details on precisely when that would happen and how much they would cost were a bit harder to come by. Just after our recent Budget Buyer’s Guide last week, lower end 22nm processors from Intel showed up at Newegg and other retailers. Let’s quickly run over the chips, their features, and how they stack up compared to existing offerings. There are also a few other new Core i5 processors that recently showed up, which we’ll cover as well.

New Intel Pentium and Core i3 Processors
Model Pentium G2120 Core i3-3220 Core i3-3220T Core i3-3225
Base Clock 3.1GHz 3.3GHz 2.8GHz 3.3GHz
Max Turbo N/A N/A N/A N/A
Cores 2 2 2 2
Threads 2 4 4 4
L3 Cache 3MB 3MB 3MB 3MB
TDP 55W 55W 35W 55W
Graphics HD Graphics HD 2500 HD 2500 HD 4000
iGPU Base Clock 650MHz 650MHz 650MHz 650MHz
GPU Turbo Clock 1.05GHz 1.05GHz 1.05GHz 1.05GHz
Quick Sync No Yes Yes Yes
WiDi No Yes Yes Yes
Hyper-Threading No Yes Yes Yes
VT-x Yes Yes Yes Yes
VT-d No No No No
AES-NI No No No No
VT-x w/ EPT Yes Yes Yes Yes
Pricing (Tray/Box) $86/$93 $117/$125 $117/$125 $134/$144
Online Price $100 $120 $130 $145


New Intel Core i3 and Core i5 Processors
Model Core i3-3240 Core i3-3240T Core i5-3330 Core i5-3350P
Base Clock 3.4GHz 2.9GHz 3.0GHz 3.1GHz
Max Turbo N/A N/A 3.2GHz 3.3GHz
Cores 2 2 4 4
Threads 4 4 4 4
L3 Cache 3MB 3MB 6MB 6MB
TDP 55W 35W 77W 69W
Graphics HD 2500 HD 2500 HD 2500 No
iGPU Base Clock 650MHz 650MHz 650MHz NA
GPU Turbo Clock 1.05GHz 1.05GHz 1.05GHz NA
Quick Sync Yes Yes Yes No
WiDi Yes Yes Yes No
Hyper-Threading Yes Yes No No
VT-x Yes Yes Yes Yes
VT-d No No Yes Yes
AES-NI No No Yes Yes
VT-x w/ EPT Yes Yes Yes Yes
Pricing (Tray/Box) $138/$147 $138/NA $182/$187 $177/$177
Online Price $150 NA $200 $190

Starting from the top, we have the least expensive 22nm Ivy Bridge CPU we’ve seen to date, the Pentium G2120. While Intel’s pricing is slightly lower than Newegg’s $100, it’s still too expensive to actually displace the Celeron G530 as our budget CPU recommendation—especially when you can find sales where the G530 is going for just $39 shipped! The HD Graphics in the Pentium should be slightly faster than the HD Graphics in the older Celeron, as they’re the newer DX11 GPU core (without Quick Sync or some of the other “extras” enabled), but even so they’re not fast enough to really warrant spending three times as much money.

Most of the Core i3 models fall into a similar category, with the exception of the i3-3225. If you’re going iGPU for your graphics, the difference between HD 2500 and HD 4000 is quite significant and makes the extra $20-$25 pretty reasonable. There are also the two lower power “T” parts, which might be of some interest to users looking at building a mini-ITX system or a quiet HTPC, but again the cost is quite high for what you’re getting. In terms of features, it’s also worth pointing out that where the Pentium (and Celeron) line trims a lot of features like Quick Sync and Hyper-Threading, Core i3 still leaves out the AES-NI instructions and VT-d support; if you need full hardware virtualization support, Core i5 might be the better choice.

As for the two new Core i5 processors, the i5-3330 is the least remarkable. It’s basically a lower clocked version of the already shipping i5-3450, but it does add VT-d support. Interestingly, despite similar suggested prices from Intel (the i5-3450 is actually supposed to cost a few dollars more), the i5-3330 ends up being $10 more than the i5-3450. Unless you need VT-d, the choice between the two offerings is clear given the current pricing. The final new CPU is the i5-3350P, and this marks the first time we’ve seen any of the Ivy Bridge processors with no iGPU. Clock speeds aren’t particularly compelling, but the TDP is slightly lower so that might be worth considering, especially if prices come down. It a killer app ever comes out for Quick Sync, though, owners of the i5-3350P might end up regretting their choice of CPU—again, given they’re currently at the same price, we think the i5-3450 is a better option.

Availability of all of the CPUs is somewhat limited right now, with only Newegg stocking the majority of the chips (outside of the OEM-only i3-3240T). We expect that to change over the next week or two, however, and that should force some of the prices down by as much as $15-$20 if you can hold off for a bit longer.

Comments Locked

65 Comments

View All Comments

  • Patflute - Friday, September 7, 2012 - link

    I don't get why the T version, that performances the weakest, is priced higher. You think having it clocked lower would decrease price...
  • ananduser - Friday, September 7, 2012 - link

    The T consumes less, it's greener at 35W.
  • Ammaross - Friday, September 7, 2012 - link

    Anand did a bench comparing "T" models to their regular counterparts and found that even though they're running at a lower TDP, they take longer to, say, transcode (on CPU) a video, or zip a bunch of files, and thus end up expending MORE power over the long run, as both chips will go to the same idle C-states when work is done. The advantage to running a "T" CPU is the TDP your chassis/heatsink is rated for. Nothing else.
  • bill4 - Friday, September 7, 2012 - link

    " and thus end up expending MORE power over the long run, "

    Well, that type of nonsense is typical of "green" products in all walks of life. They're forced on us by laws passed by liberals, but more often than not they're actually destructive to the environment. They're for stupid people who vote Democrat (especially lets say, the demographic of young females, who are particularly gullible and unintelligent) to "feel good", not any actual help to the environment.
  • andyo - Saturday, September 8, 2012 - link

    How did you end up writing all that?
  • pablo906 - Saturday, September 8, 2012 - link

    anyone ever tell you you're an ignorant mysoginist
  • KorruptioN - Saturday, September 8, 2012 - link

    We're talking about CPU TDP yet you had to chime in with your hurr-durr ignorant gubmint tripe....
  • Azethoth - Sunday, September 9, 2012 - link

    Its not even true on the face of it. Data centers use low tdp chips not because of young girls but because of sheer naked economic factors. Chilling chips costs money.

    Google and Apple use them because they have actual smart people in charge, not dumb hicks angry at the world frothing cheetos laden curses from their mom's basements.
  • GotThumbs - Monday, September 10, 2012 - link

    Unfortunately your use of a slur also displays your level of ignorance.

    Have you really put Bill4 in his place by responding in a like manner?

    The answer is NO. There will always be ignorant people on BOTH sides. It's important to remember that these individuals are NOT an reflection of all people.

    You may not agree with someones opinion...but as an American...You should respect their right to have one.

    Best wishes,
  • madmilk - Saturday, September 8, 2012 - link

    The same is true for server CPUs, and is why a E5-2690 costs more than the 2687W despite the latter being faster. In servers' case, you're limited by how much electricity is available for you to use at any instant in time. Break that, and the datacenter will get pissed at you.

Log in

Don't have an account? Sign up now