You can read the review of the processor here. An AMD Overdrive session allowed them to push the core speed of the processor to 3.40 GHz. The guys from Donanimhaber ran the tests while the chip was overclocked at 3.10 GHz, along with a Cinebench run at 3.30 GHz. AMD has officially kicked off their New Horizon event and. CPU 2021 benchmarks: Compare two products side-by-side or see a cascading list of product ratings along with our annotations. On the other hand, the Intel Core 2 Duo E8200 remains ahead, although it is outpaced at wPrime. AMD RYZEN ZEN 8 Core / 16 Thread CPU Benchmarked On Par With Intel’s Core i7-6900K, Clocked at 3.4 GHz+ at 95W, Stellar IPC Gains. The new chip comes with 元 cache, as well as with other K10-specific optimizations, which give it a good advantage over the Athlon X2 5200+ “Brisbane” running at the same speed. The results of the tests place the upcoming Athlon X2 7750 “Kuma” somewhere between the Athlon X2 5200+ and Core 2 Duo E8200 on a broader performance scale. Zen 2 is a computer processor microarchitecture by AMD.It is the successor of AMDs Zen and Zen+ microarchitectures, and is fabricated on the 7 nanometer MOSFET node from TSMC. Besides that, the Cinebench 10 test was also run while the chip was overclocked at 3.30 GHz. The benchmarking tests the Athlon X2 7750 was subjected to include 3DMark06 (CPU Score), CineBench 10 (64-bit), wPrime 1.55 (32M), and Fritz Chess. The performance of the CPU was then compared to that of the Intel Core 2 Duo E8200, Core 2 Duo E8400, Core 2 Duo E6420, AMD Phenom X3 8750 and Athlon X2 5200+ (Brisbane), all running at stock speeds. Its base clock speed is 3.40 GHz, and maximum clock speed in turbo boost - No turbo. The chip was tested on a Foxconn A7DA-S (AMD 790 GX + SB750) motherboard, which sported 2 GB of 800 MHz DDR2 memory. AMD Phenom II X4 965 - Benchmark, Test and Specs The processor AMD Phenom II X4 965 is developed on the 45 nm technology node and architecture Deneb (K10). Other specifications of the chip include 512 KB of L2 cache per core, and a shared 元 cache of 2 MB. The clock speed of the Athlon X2 7750 is set at 2.70 GHz and is complemented by a HyperTransport 3.0 system interface. The Kuma based Athlon X2 7750 chip seems to have got into the hands of the guys at Donanimhaber, who subjected it to some benchmarking tests to see what the CPU was capable of. I digress.The first pieces of news on AMD's upcoming 65nm K10 dual core processors have started to emerge to the web.
#AMD K10 BENCHMARK SOFTWARE#
and more importantly what software will be used with the CPUs the real world performance difference could be almost nothing to somewhere around 10-15x as fast. More precisely, the rendering speed of the 16-core K10 system is just 1.87 times the speed of the 8-core K8 system, both running at the same processor frequency. AMD recently showed off a 4-socket quad-core Barcelona (K10) which almost doubles the speed of a 4-socket dual-core Opteron (K8) on PoV-Ray. Once you take into account faster clock speeds, number of cores, cache sizes, integrated memory controllers, etc. The PoV-Ray benchmark and AMDs Barcelona demo. Which means that an Ivy Bridge CPU at the same speed as a Conroe CPU (2006ish) is about 2x as fast per clock cycle, on average. So if we start back at Conroe and work our way to present day Ivy Bridge, that's 5 new generations of processors. Just for a rough order of magnitude I figure an average of 15% increase in performance per clock cycle, per generation (not including clock speed, number of cores, etc.). AmdfangirlSometimes I wish you updated legacy CPUs like the Core 2 Duo or even perhaps the Athlon 64 X2 series, just one or two models so that people upgrading can have an idea how much faster the CPU is in relation to their new purchase.Īgreed, maybe just one dual core and one quad? q9550 and e6850? not that I still own both of those or anything.īut let's do some math.