The Kirin 9010 succeeded the Kirin 9000S when Huawei officially unveiled the Pura 70 series earlier this year, but the company was also working on another version of its latest chipset without keeping anyone in the loop. Called the Kirin 9010L, the existence of this silicon was found thanks to a thorough investigation of the newly announced Nova 12 Ultra Star Edition, which differs from the regular version. Here, we look at what sets apart the Kirin 9010 and the Kirin 9010L.
A buyer on the Chinese video-uploading platform bilibili posted a clip of the Nova 12 Ultra Star Edition, revealing that the latest release is running the new Kirin 9010L. Strangely, Huawei has kept this version under wraps, but if we recall correctly, the company did not divulge much information on the Kirin 9010 either. The decision was likely made to ward off any unwanted attention from U.S. authorities. In a nutshell, the Kirin 9010L is the slower version of the chipset that fuels the Pura 70 family. Instead of a 12-core CPU cluster, Huawei has incorporated a 9-core one, with the performance cores running at a slightly lowered clock speed.
Coming to the configuration, the Kirin 9010L features two performance cores running at 2.19GHz, followed by four medium cores clocked at 2.18GHz, with three efficiency cores operating at 1.40GHz. Compared to the Kirin 9010, the less powerful variant’s reduced frequencies and altered core count mean it will obtain lower single-core and multi-core results. Since the Nova 12 Ultra Edition occupies the non-flagship category of smartphones, Huawei has probably made the right move in equipping this handset with the slower Kirin 9010L.
Given that the Kirin 9010 uses SMIC’s 7nm process, there would likely be lower-tier binned parts that
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