Tuesday, July 1st 2008
Intel Nehalem Turbo-charges Radeon HD4850 Benchmark
Intel Nehalem Posts Impressive CPU Scores with 3D Benchmarks
The rather lucky Taiwanese team of Tom's Hardware got their hands on an Intel Bloomfield engineering sample that has a clock-speed of 2.93 GHz, running on a Intel X58 chipset based motherboard made by Foxconn called Renaissance to evaluate a Gainward Radeon HD4850 sample. System details are provided below.Of course, the benchmark lacks the advantage NVIDIA PhysX gives to the CPU score in 3DMark Vantage, but for a CPU alone, it is a more than decent score. The system secured P7182 at default settings with a CPU score of 17966. In 3DMark06, it churned out 12786 3DMarks with a CPU score of 5183. In the Crysis CPU benchmark, scores of 33.70 and 18.29 were recorded at 1280x1024 resolution with no anti-aliasing.
Source:
Tom's Hardware
The rather lucky Taiwanese team of Tom's Hardware got their hands on an Intel Bloomfield engineering sample that has a clock-speed of 2.93 GHz, running on a Intel X58 chipset based motherboard made by Foxconn called Renaissance to evaluate a Gainward Radeon HD4850 sample. System details are provided below.Of course, the benchmark lacks the advantage NVIDIA PhysX gives to the CPU score in 3DMark Vantage, but for a CPU alone, it is a more than decent score. The system secured P7182 at default settings with a CPU score of 17966. In 3DMark06, it churned out 12786 3DMarks with a CPU score of 5183. In the Crysis CPU benchmark, scores of 33.70 and 18.29 were recorded at 1280x1024 resolution with no anti-aliasing.
55 Comments on Intel Nehalem Turbo-charges Radeon HD4850 Benchmark
Another reason why 'HD4850' was used in the title was to show there's no latest NVIDIA card that could affect CPU score and that there are pure CPU scores in the benchmark.
forums.techpowerup.com/showpost.php?p=823121&postcount=319
Sure I have 8 actual cores, though a lower clock, crap memory bandwidth and an inferior architecture.
Harpertowns at the same clock would perform a lot better. ie current generation can keep up easily.
also bear in mind this is on an engineering sample cpu and mobo, not too bad overall at stock clocks
Rich
Against other quad CPUs @ the same speed, aren't those scores very high?
EDIT
This is, ofc, without the physX thing.
As for the 2.93GHz Bloomfield, I thought that this chip was only a quad-core but would handle 8-threads.
Translated version of the original link.
www.anandtech.com/cpuchipsets/intel/showdoc.aspx?i=3326&p=7
So, Nehalem, TODAY, is not impressive at all. You can get the same performance per watt by just overclocking a penryn. However, I'm sure the figures will improve once they optimise mainboard, BIOS, memory channels, and final (non-engineering sample) CPUs will have low power requirements. Or rather, lets hope so, otherwise Nahelem is a flop, and NOTHING like the mammoth win when Intel moved to Core 2 architecture.