The Intel 300T is a desktop processor built for the LGA 1700 socket, offering broad motherboard compatibility across seven chipsets: B760, H770, Z790, H610, H670, B660, and Z690. It is manufactured on a 10 nm process and operates with a thermal design power of 35W, with a maximum rated CPU temperature of 100 °C. The chip includes integrated graphics, supports 64-bit computing, and features PCIe 5.0 connectivity for modern expansion card support.
The Intel 300T runs on a dual-core configuration at a base speed of 1 GHz per core, handling up to 4 threads in total, and can reach a turbo clock speed of 3.4 GHz with a clock multiplier of 34. The processor does not feature an unlocked multiplier and does not use big.LITTLE technology. Its cache hierarchy consists of 160 KB of L1, 2.5 MB of L2 at 1.25 MB per core, and 6 MB of L3 cache at 3 MB per core, providing a structured memory buffer across the two cores.
In PassMark testing, the Intel 300T achieves an overall score of 6084, while its single-core result stands at 2786, reflecting the per-core throughput of this dual-core processor.
The Intel 300T includes an integrated UHD Graphics 710, running at a base clock of 300 MHz and capable of reaching a turbo frequency of 1450 MHz. It features 16 execution units, 128 shading units, 8 texture mapping units, and 8 render output units, with support for up to 4 displays simultaneously. On the API side, it is compatible with DirectX 12, OpenGL 4.5, and OpenCL 3, covering a solid range of graphics and compute workloads.
The Intel 300T supports DDR5 memory across two channels, with a maximum RAM speed of 4800 MHz and a peak memory bandwidth of 76.8 GB/s. It can address up to 192 GB of system memory in total, offering considerable headroom for memory-intensive workloads. ECC memory is not supported by this processor.
The Intel 300T supports multithreading and includes the NX bit for hardware-level memory protection. Its instruction set support spans a broad range of extensions, including MMX, F16C, FMA3, AES, AVX and AVX2, as well as SSE 4.1 and SSE 4.2, enabling a variety of general-purpose and vectorized computing tasks.