Intel announced its next-gen Thunderbolt 5 standard last year, codenamed Barlow Bridge, with some monster specifications that we'll see introduced later this year inside of its next-gen Arrow Lake CPUs.
Now we've got some more information on Intel's plans with Thunderbolt 5 from hardware leaker "YuuKi_AnS" on X, who shared some new slides for the Barlow Bridge controller for Intel's next-gen Arrow Lake-S platform, so now we know Thunderbolt 5 connectivity will be featured on at least some next-gen Intel 800 series motherboards.
Intel will have support for the PCIe Gen4 x4 interface, offering up to 64Gbps of bandwidth... that's double the 32Gbps of bandwidth that is maxed out with Thunderbolt 3 and 4 while enabling users to use their Thunderbolt 5 connector for external GPUs of the future.
Thunderbolt 4 maxes out with PCIe Gen3 x4 or PCIe Gen4 x2, which is why we're seeing manufacturers moving on and using the new OCulink connector for external graphics cards. OCulink supports full PCIe Gen4 x4 connectivity and is already baked onto some gaming handhelds and external GPUs. Thunderbolt 5 should be the next big step for Intel, allowing fast, bandwidth-hungry graphics cards to be fed over a single Thunderbolt 5 cable.
- Read more: Intel reveals Thunderbolt 5 standard: 240W charging, 540Hz, 120Gbps, 3x 4K displays at 144Hz
The following are the Thunderbolt 5 specifications that Intel teased last year:
- PCIe Gen4 x4 support (64 Gbps full duplex)
- DisplayPort 2.1 support (up to 80 Gbps)
- Asymmetric operation (120 Gbps transmit / 40 Gbps receive), in addition to the regular 80 Gbps transmit / 80 Gbps receive
- Usage of PAM3 (Pulse Amplitude Modulation with three levels) enabling more data transfer in each clock cycle
- Compulsory requirement to support dual 6K monitors
- Compulsory 140W PD support for charging, up to 240W optional
- Doubled Thunderbolt networking bandwidth (from 10 Gbps full duplex to 20 Gbps full duplex)
- Existing Thunderbolt 3 cables up to 1m can also support the new speeds
Thunderbolt 4 supports asymmetrical connection of up to 120Gbps of bandwidth in a single direction or 80Gbps bi-directional bandwidth (80Gbps both up and down the cable). Intel's new Thunderbolt 4 standard also supports the new DisplayPort 2.1 standard and has compulsory support for 140W Power Delivery, with optional support of up to 240W Power Delivery.
Intel's new Thunderbolt 5 standard will use the regular USB-C standard for its connector, compatible with USB for data transfer. The new Thunderbolt 5 standard will also support up to a mammoth 10K resolution, with up to 3 x DDI (Display Interfaces) supporting the new DisplayPort 2.1 standard, with graphics cards connected through the PCIe 5.0 x16 interface and into the new Intel Arrow Lake-S processor.
We shouldn't expect to see Thunderbolt 5 devices or products until 2025, while the new standard might even spill into 2026. I think we'll see them in 2025, with Intel ready to go for the next-gen connectivity standard at the time.