CPU Performance, Short Form

For our motherboard reviews, we use our short form testing method. These tests usually focus on if a motherboard is using MultiCore Turbo (the feature used to have maximum turbo on at all times, giving a frequency advantage), or if there are slight gains to be had from tweaking the firmware. We put the memory settings at the CPU manufacturers suggested frequency, making it very easy to see which motherboards have MCT enabled by default.

Rendering - Blender 2.79b: 3D Creation Suite - link

A high profile rendering tool, Blender is open-source allowing for massive amounts of configurability, and is used by a number of high-profile animation studios worldwide. The organization recently released a Blender benchmark package, a couple of weeks after we had narrowed our Blender test for our new suite, however their test can take over an hour. For our results, we run one of the sub-tests in that suite through the command line - a standard ‘bmw27’ scene in CPU only mode, and measure the time to complete the render.

Rendering: Blender 2.79b

Rendering – POV-Ray 3.7.1: Ray Tracing - link

The Persistence of Vision Ray Tracer, or POV-Ray, is a freeware package for as the name suggests, ray tracing. It is a pure renderer, rather than modeling software, but the latest beta version contains a handy benchmark for stressing all processing threads on a platform. We have been using this test in motherboard reviews to test memory stability at various CPU speeds to good effect – if it passes the test, the IMC in the CPU is stable for a given CPU speed. As a CPU test, it runs for approximately 1-2 minutes on high-end platforms.

Rendering: POV-Ray 3.7.1 Benchmark

Compression – WinRAR 5.60b3: link

Our WinRAR test from 2013 is updated to the latest version of WinRAR at the start of 2014. We compress a set of 2867 files across 320 folders totaling 1.52 GB in size – 95% of these files are small typical website files, and the rest (90% of the size) are small 30-second 720p videos.

Encoding: WinRAR 5.60b3

Synthetic – 7-Zip v1805: link

Out of our compression/decompression tool tests, 7-zip is the most requested and comes with a built-in benchmark. For our test suite, we’ve pulled the latest version of the software and we run the benchmark from the command line, reporting the compression, decompression, and a combined score.

It is noted in this benchmark that the latest multi-die processors have very bi-modal performance between compression and decompression, performing well in one and badly in the other. There are also discussions around how the Windows Scheduler is implementing every thread. As we get more results, it will be interesting to see how this plays out.

Encoding: 7-Zip 1805 CompressionEncoding: 7-Zip 1805 DecompressionEncoding: 7-Zip 1805 Combined

Point Calculations – 3D Movement Algorithm Test: link

3DPM is a self-penned benchmark, taking basic 3D movement algorithms used in Brownian Motion simulations and testing them for speed. High floating point performance, MHz, and IPC win in the single thread version, whereas the multithread version has to handle the threads and loves more cores. For a brief explanation of the platform agnostic coding behind this benchmark, see my forum post here.

System: 3D Particle Movement v2.1

System Performance Gaming Performance
Comments Locked

46 Comments

View All Comments

  • Chaitanya - Monday, January 25, 2021 - link

    IO on this board is quite impressive.
  • YB1064 - Monday, January 25, 2021 - link

    Article mentions "active cooling on the chipset", yet the pictures show no fan. What gives?
  • Green33333 - Monday, January 25, 2021 - link

    The fan is hidden under the perforated shroud around where it says "speed"
  • MilaEaston - Tuesday, January 26, 2021 - link

    easy job online from home. I have received exactly $20845 last month from this home job. Join now this job and start making extra cash online. salary8 . com
  • Aninajoe - Sunday, January 31, 2021 - link

    easy job online from home. I have received exactly $20845 last month from this home job. Join now this job and start making extra cash online. salary8 . com
  • shabby - Monday, January 25, 2021 - link

    Do we really need gaming benchmarks for motherboards? 😂
  • TheinsanegamerN - Monday, January 25, 2021 - link

    Yes. Some boards have inexplicably worse performance if something firmware wise is screwed up. We've seen discrepancies before. It also lets us see if a board has issues maintaining turbo boost.
  • cbm80 - Monday, January 25, 2021 - link

    It should be pass/fail. Printing numbers rewards cheating (non-defeatable overclocking of some sort).
  • vanish1 - Monday, January 25, 2021 - link

    I have this board and the PCI-E slot locks are so infuriating I've almost destroyed my board trying to remove a full size GPU from it.
  • sibuna - Monday, January 25, 2021 - link

    I have this board as well and TBH they are annoying but TBH they all are regardless of board

Log in

Don't have an account? Sign up now