The Intel Core i3-14100F is a desktop processor built for the LGA 1700 socket, with chipset support covering H610, B660, H670, B760, H770, Z690, and Z790 — spanning entry-level to higher-end Intel platform options. It does not include integrated graphics, so a discrete GPU is required for any display output. Manufactured on a 10 nm process, it operates within a 60W TDP with a maximum temperature rating of 100 °C, supports PCIe 5.0, and is fully 64-bit compatible.
The processor runs four cores at a uniform base clock of 3.5 GHz across 8 threads, with no big.LITTLE mixed-core arrangement in play. Turbo Boost version 2 enables a peak single-core frequency of 4.7 GHz, though the multiplier is locked at 35, leaving no path for manual overclocking adjustments. Cache is organized across three levels — 320 KB of L1, 5 MB of L2 at 1.25 MB per core, and 12 MB of L3 at 3 MB per core — providing a straightforward and consistent cache hierarchy across all four cores.
The processor records a PassMark score of 15,278 in multi-threaded testing, with a single-core result of 3,773. On Geekbench 6, it achieves a multi-core score of 8,211 and a single-core score of 2,437, giving a consistent cross-platform view of its per-core output and overall threading capability.
The processor supports DDR5 memory in a dual-channel configuration, with a maximum speed of 4,800 MHz and a peak bandwidth of 76.8 GB/s. It accommodates up to 192 GB of total memory and includes support for ECC memory, providing error-correction capability that adds a layer of data reliability for suitable workloads.
The processor supports a full range of instruction sets including MMX, F16C, FMA3, AES, AVX, AVX2, SSE 4.1, and SSE 4.2, enabling hardware acceleration across vectorized math, media processing, and encryption tasks. Multithreading is enabled, allowing two threads to run per physical core simultaneously, and the NX bit is present to provide a hardware-enforced barrier against execution of code in memory regions marked as non-executable.