Multi-threaded evaluation
CINEBENCH R10 64-bit - multi-CPU render |
|
GIGABYTE MA785GPMT-UD2H (785G) | Intel DH55TC (H55) | ASUS M4A89GTD PRO/USB3 (890GX) |
---|
14114 | 10850 | 14064 |
Pov-ray 3.7.0 beta 34 - 64-bit |
|
GIGABYTE MA785GPMT-UD2H (785G) | Intel DH55TC (H55) | ASUS M4A89GTD PRO/USB3 (890GX) |
---|
3072.05 | 2152 | 3064.53 |
StaxRip X264 + AAC encoding - pass one |
|
GIGABYTE MA785GPMT-UD2H (785G) | Intel DH55TC (H55) | ASUS M4A89GTD PRO/USB3 (890GX) |
---|
209 | 286.67 | 211 |
StaxRip X264 + AAC encoding - pass two |
|
GIGABYTE MA785GPMT-UD2H (785G) | Intel DH55TC (H55) | ASUS M4A89GTD PRO/USB3 (890GX) |
---|
174 | 244.67 | 176 |
Intel's Turbo-Boosting Core i5 661 had the edge in single-thread performance, but with the above four benchmarks making full use a CPU's multiple cores, AMD's quad-core Phenom II X4 965BE understandably comes out ahead.
In terms of CPU performance, the 890GX is practically identical to the older 785G. Is the first 800-series chipset worth the extra Ā£50 or so? We'll find out by putting the IGP and the SATA 6Gbps interface through their paces.