![]() ![]() Memory makes a massive difference with Ryzen, just rna it on my 2700x with 3200mhz cl14 mem and got 3500 and change. Also I could try to use the same speed ram in all to help equalise that also. With more time, I'd set systems to run at fixed clock so there is no ambiguity. The 8086k seems to do a bit too well compared to the others. Speedup from HT/SMT is in ball park of 30%, so similar to R15. Intel CPUs seem to do a bit better here, but I haven't tested for ram scaling at all yet, so that might be a factor where it wasn't really in R15. Ryzen 1600: 1994 (97.7 points per core per GHz) Ryzen 2600: 2912 (all core clock 3.8-ish GHz, dual channel 2666 ram, 127.7 points per core per GHz) Ryzen 1600: 2536 (all core clock 3.4 GHz, dual channel 2933 ram, 124.3 points per core per GHz) Each test was run at least 2 times, the first time observing actual core clocks, 2nd time without monitoring software which generally lead to a small increase in score. Ok, some PRELIMINARY results and analysis.īattle of the 6 cores at my house. ![]() ![]() Other Misc Devices: 2012 MacBook Pro 13" running Linux Mint 21.1 - Mac Pro 1,1 (2x dual cores as I haven't swapped the quads in yet, 32GB DDR2 and a 512MB HD4870) running El Cap/Lion/sometimes other Mac OS X versions - iPod Video (5th gen) Mobile/Work Devices: Late 2014 iMac 5K (work computer) - iPhone 13 Pro Max - Apple Watch S3 Rest of the HEDT collection - Xeon X5675/EVGA X58 Classified 4-Way SLI - i7 4930K/EVGA X79 Dark Smol Rig - i7 6950X - Noctua NH-L12S - EVGA X99 Micro 2 - 4x4GB 2800MHz DDR4 - Radeon PRO WX2100 - 250GB 960 Evo + hotswap 2.5" bay + LG WH14NS40 ODD - SilverStone SST-TX300 - Dell Inspiron 530S Chassis - Linux Mint 21.1 Main PC - i9 7980XE - EKWB Quantum-something block - EVGA X299 Dark - 4x8GB HyperX Predator DDR4 - Intel ARC A770 LE - 1TB 970 Evo + 500GB XPG Atom30 + 2x 1TB MX500 - EVGA 1600W T2 - Corsair 750D Airflow - CPU-only custom loop w/360 slim rad + 280mm thick (60mm) rad & Noctua Redux NF-P12/P14s fans - Windows 11 Intel HEDT and Server platform enthusiasts: Intel HEDT Xeon/i7 Megathread Once I get over that hurdle, it's time to get benching!Įdit: direct downloads are now also available:Įdit: Results can be posted in link below. Unfortunately there doesn't appear to be a standalone download for Windows, and you have to get it through the MS store. This could be better representative of software and hardware looking forward. One area where it has been updated is that it scales to more threads, as well as using newer instructions. To match the latest version of the software, the company has now launched the Cinebench R20 benchmark.Įveryone loves Cinebench R15 right? What could be better than that? I don't know if this is it, but its successor is now available as Cinebench R20. In recent years it has slowly become less relevant, as Maxon has moved through to version 19 and 20 of the software. The latest version has been Cinebench R15, released for version 15 of Cinema 4D. One of the key benchmarks that have been used in the industry is Cinebench. ![]()
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