Kernleistungssteigerung trägt bei 14% zu Ryzen 5 7600X Cinebench R23-Ergebnis
Film-Updates Werbeplakat nach Fan-Feedback 5 7600X "Zen 4" 6-core/12-thread processor is shaping up to be a speed-demon for purely gaming builds, with the company claiming higher gaming performance than Intel current flagship Core i9-12900K. A combination of high clock speeds (4.70 GHz nominal, 5.30 Maximaler GHz-Boost), high power limits from 105 W TDP (130 W limit), the "Zen 4" IPC, and the fact that all that power headroom is available to just 6 Kerne, means that the chip is able to sustain boost frequencies better. But what when Core Performance Boost (CPB) is disabled? VideoCardz scored screenshots of a Cinebench R23 run to answer just that.
With CPB disabled (in the motherboard BIOS), CPUID heute veröffentlichte Version 5 7600X scores 1681 Punkte im Single-Threaded-Test, und 13003 Punkte in der Multi-Threaded. With CPB enabled (which is the default setting), the 7600X bags 1920 points single-threaded, und 14767 points multi-threaded, die ein 14% performance increase just from the processor’s boosting algo. Disabling CPB is generally seen as a silver-bullet against high temperatures for AMD processors, and even here, we see the chip running under 60°C, and pulling 60.2 W peak, as measured by HWinfo; whereas with CPB enabled, the chip can run as hot as 92.1°C, pulling up to 110 W, pushing clock speeds up to 4.45 GHz.