Benchmarks - Cinebench R15 and SiSoft Sandra 2018
Contents
Benchmark – Cinebench R15
Cinebench is a popular benchmarking tool that shouldn’t be stranger to our readers. Cinebench CPU test uses all of your system’s processing power to render a photorealistic 3D scene (from the viral “No Keyframes” animation by AixSponza).
This scene makes use of various algorithms to stress all available processor cores. In fact, CINEBENCH can measure systems with up to 256 processor threads.
This test scene contains approximately 2,000 objects which in turn contain more than 300,000 polygons in total, and uses sharp and blurred reflections, area lights, shadows, procedural shaders, antialiasing, and much more. The result is displayed in points (pts). The higher the number, the faster your processor.
Based on the CPU (Single Core) result of 208 cb, it confirms that Intel is very confident of it’s single core performance. AMD Ryzen 7 2700X can’t even reach 175 cb in our tests in the past.
When it comes to CPU test which uses all 8 cores and 8 threads, the score is 1477. The benchmark is run at default and at 5.1 GHz. It scored 1477 cb and when overclocked, it scored 1539. A Ryzen 7 2700X easily achieves 1808 CB.
The result is similar to that of the previous generation Core i7-8700K and slightly slower than a Ryzen 7 2700 (~ 1533 CB).
SiSoft Sandra 2018 Titanium SP2 benchmark
We ran the SiSoft Sandra 2018 Titanium SP2 benchmarks for overall processor score. This test runs tests on cryptography, scientific analysis, image processing etc. Some of the tests like financial analysis are very demanding and could cause system hangs if the system is unstable.
The score of 4.92 and 5.09 is obtained during overclocking at 5.1 GHz.
5.2 GHz results in hangs and we couldn’t complete the tests.
What kind of voltages were you running when you had the 9700k at 5.1? I’m also quite curious as to what temps the vrm had during testing.