Wednesday, May 6th 2020
Intel Core i9-10900K Cinebench 15 Benchmark Leaked: Stock 2347 Points, 3K Points @ 5.4 GHz and 1.35 V
Even as review embargoes remain on Intel's latest 10th Gen CPUs, benchmark scores that show what these 14 nm CPUS are capable of are already flooding the web. Case in point: a Cinebench 15 benchmark of Intel's unlocked Core i9-10900K running at an overclocked 5.4 GHz on all cores @ 1.35 V core. The 10-core CPU features a base clockspeed set at 3.7 GHz, so we're looking at a frequency increase of around 46%.
At those speeds, tested on an ASRock Phantom Gaming 4/AX motherboard and 16 GB of G.Skill DDR4-3200 MHz CL14 memory, the Intel Core i9-10900K managed to post a 3002 multi-core score. When at stock, it achieved a relatively paltry 2347 points. An AMD Ryzen 7 3800X CPU (8-core, 16-thread) typically scores around 2200 points, and an AMD Ryzen 9 3900X CPU (12-core, 24-thread) achieves a 3200 score. They do so at stock frequencies, though; and the Intel Core i9-10900K is sandwiched in-between those when it comes to core-count, but not on price: 10 Intel cores will set you back $488.00, while AMD's 8-core launched at $399 (and is now cheaper) and AMD's 12-core CPU launched for $499. Adding to the benchmarking caveat, the operating temperatures for this particular Core i9-10900K show 0º min and 69º max, so assuming the temperature report is correct, it's fair to say an air cooler wasn't used for this overclocking feat.
Source:
Videocardz
At those speeds, tested on an ASRock Phantom Gaming 4/AX motherboard and 16 GB of G.Skill DDR4-3200 MHz CL14 memory, the Intel Core i9-10900K managed to post a 3002 multi-core score. When at stock, it achieved a relatively paltry 2347 points. An AMD Ryzen 7 3800X CPU (8-core, 16-thread) typically scores around 2200 points, and an AMD Ryzen 9 3900X CPU (12-core, 24-thread) achieves a 3200 score. They do so at stock frequencies, though; and the Intel Core i9-10900K is sandwiched in-between those when it comes to core-count, but not on price: 10 Intel cores will set you back $488.00, while AMD's 8-core launched at $399 (and is now cheaper) and AMD's 12-core CPU launched for $499. Adding to the benchmarking caveat, the operating temperatures for this particular Core i9-10900K show 0º min and 69º max, so assuming the temperature report is correct, it's fair to say an air cooler wasn't used for this overclocking feat.
46 Comments on Intel Core i9-10900K Cinebench 15 Benchmark Leaked: Stock 2347 Points, 3K Points @ 5.4 GHz and 1.35 V
Also still can't beat out a 3950x, also wonder what kind of cooler they were using to achieve those numbers on the 10900
So your choice is: a processor that works at default close to its maximum performance, is cheaper overall (because of the included cooler and lower power requirements), and better at multi core. Or a processor that is marginally faster at single core, potentially better for high frame rate gaming, but requires you to buy a beefier PSU, a cooler, and if you want to really get the most out of it, you have to manually overclock it to even get close in multi core performance.
Oddly enough, it will probably be the least proficient users that go for Intel because of their brand recognition and years of being "top dog." Whereas those who want a well rounded processor will stick with the Zen 2 chips. And the smartest of all will wait for Zen 3 this year because it will torpedo both options, and Intel won't have an answer for another whole year.
So 10% OC gets 28% increase, well that base seems wrong as normally performance doesn't keep increasing linerally once you pass the sweet spot freq wise.
That’s all they can do with current 14nm nodes.
We can all say: Intel, you boosted bastard lolz
So when OC the limiters are removed most likely, but also this is a ES chip.
:twitch:
Nothing to see here folks, move along to a proper review later.
videocardz.com/newz/msi-discusses-intel-comet-lake-s-processors-binning-and-overclockability
The french price and often on sale at 400 euro
The Intel die-hard fans will rightly claim it's the fastest-clocked, money-no-object processor you can get right now.
Meanwhile,
- the productivity crowd will be realising that it's outperformed at half the power consumption by a 3900X, which actually costs less when you factor in a decent B450 board.
- most gamers will look at the $700 CPU and board cost of these new Intels and decide that their money is better spent on a GPU because a 9700K is plenty for the now.
Leaving only the influencers, streamers, and frothy mouth fanboys to get worked up about it.Maybe I'm wrong, but it's still just Skylake+++++ so it's unlkely to offer up any real surprises.