- Joined
- Jul 26, 2013
- Messages
- 438 (0.11/day)
- Location
- Midlands, UK
System Name | Electra III |
---|---|
Processor | AMD Ryzen 5 3600 @ 4.40 GHz (1.3 V) |
Motherboard | ASUS PRIME X570-PRO with BIOS 5003 |
Cooling | Cooler Master Hyper 212 EVO V1 + 4× ARCTIC P12 PWM |
Memory | 32 GiB Kingston FURY Renegade RGB (DDR4-3600 16-20-20-39) |
Video Card(s) | PowerColor Fighter RX 6700 XT with Adrenalin 24.7.1 |
Storage | 1 TiB Samsung 970 EVO Plus + 4 TB WD Red Pro |
Display(s) | Dell G3223Q + Samsung U28R550Q + HP 22w |
Case | Fractal Design Focus G (Black) |
Audio Device(s) | Realtek HD Audio S1220A |
Power Supply | EVGA SuperNOVA G3 750 W |
Mouse | Logitech G502 X Lightspeed + Logitech MX Master 2S |
Keyboard | MSI VIGOR GK71 SONIC Blue |
Software | Windows 10 22H2 Pro x64 |
Benchmark Scores | CPU-Z = 542/4,479 — R15 = 212/1,741 — R20 = 510/3,980 — PM 10 = 2,784/19,911 — GB 5 = 1,316/7,564 |
What the heck happened to cpuZ's bench scores ? They are like less than half of what they used to be if that
It looks like I'll have to run my bench again and seems they change the scaling of the results
Not even that. Going by the two stock Ryzen 7 1700X scores, single-thread dropped from 2,139 to 370.
Incidentally, there's something that has just struck my mind. Check out the single-thread graph for v1.7.9.0. Look at the scores for the Core i7-6700K and Core i5-7600K. Both at 4.20 GHz, yet the 7600K is 7.2% faster, and with a lower base clock frequency at that. IPC-wise, Skylake and Kaby Lake are absolutely identical so that doesn't explain it either.