Det0x
Golden Member
- Sep 11, 2014
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Cinebench 24, multi and single core on undervolted 13900K (60x 1-core, 55x all-core):About same powerdraw as in Cinebench R23..
So i'm not quite sure what your trying to prove/achieve here ?Cinebench 24, multi and single core on undervolted 13900K (60x 1-core, 55x all-core):
View attachment 91149View attachment 91150
CB23 hits my 253 W power-limit, so CB24 uses less power here. Your CB23 score is 7.5% higher for 25% higher max wattage, but I assume your average power is lower!? If not then your CB24 score is 8.5% higher for about 30% higher wattage.
Ryzen 5 3600 (with 32GB DDR4 3200)
CPU Multi Core: 538
CPU Single Core: 74
Radeon RX 7600 8GB
GPU: 3842
View attachment 86904
Updated Cinebench R24 score with the ASUS ROG CROSSHAIR X870E APEX, and like i said earlier in that thread, APEX is showing really good efficiency together with excellent memory performance (more information and runs can be found in linked thread)9950X (ES) maxed out on custom watercooling
Cinebench R23 MT = 50k
(ST = 2394)
View attachment 110565
Cinebench R24 MT = 2810
(ST = 149 i think it was)
View attachment 110566
+24% over a typical 9950X. Hardcore OC scene is alive and well!Cinebench R24 MT = 2868 points
I don't think it ever died. The only thing that changed is the proportion of effort to % gain is so extremely different from 10 years ago.+24% over a typical 9950X. Hardcore OC scene is alive and well!
I really wish AMD would sell an XS series chip with a small "direct die covering" copper block and define a new heatsink form factor so mere mortals can get in on the fun too. Maybe with a little engineering, it may even work with current AM5 heatsinks.There is no longer a useful amount low hanging fruit that practically anyone can dial in to overclock.