Hello everyone
I was checking the PassMark's web page of the processor single-threaded performance, when I found that the Athlon X4 845 scored 1,773, which is close to A10-7890K's 1,716, and considerbly (in relation), larger than the scores of A10-7870K (1,529), X4 880K (1,532) and X4 860K (1,596). This made me initially think that Athlon X4 845 would deliver the highest overall performance, since all of the processors have the same core count, only to find on the overll performance page that this is not the case.
1-)
My first question is how could the X4 845 deliver higher single-threaded performance than the X4 860K, which is (the latter) in turn scoring higher than the X4 880K. This is although the the three processors are from the same generation, and have virtually the same architecture, and their clock speeds are inversely proportional to their single-threaded scores, as X4 880K which scored the least among the the three athlons, has the highest clock speed. This sounds counter-intuitive
http://www.cpubenchmark.net/singleThread.html
2-)
Since the X845 has the highest single threaded performance, how did the 3 Athlons score very close results in the benchmark of the overall performance. Especially, since the the three processors have the same architecture, from the same generation ?! This also sounds very counter-intuitive. The three processors are supposed to be one family with scales of performance.
http://www.cpubenchmark.net/high_end_cpus.html
Sorry for the long thread
Thanks in advance
Regards
I was checking the PassMark's web page of the processor single-threaded performance, when I found that the Athlon X4 845 scored 1,773, which is close to A10-7890K's 1,716, and considerbly (in relation), larger than the scores of A10-7870K (1,529), X4 880K (1,532) and X4 860K (1,596). This made me initially think that Athlon X4 845 would deliver the highest overall performance, since all of the processors have the same core count, only to find on the overll performance page that this is not the case.
1-)
My first question is how could the X4 845 deliver higher single-threaded performance than the X4 860K, which is (the latter) in turn scoring higher than the X4 880K. This is although the the three processors are from the same generation, and have virtually the same architecture, and their clock speeds are inversely proportional to their single-threaded scores, as X4 880K which scored the least among the the three athlons, has the highest clock speed. This sounds counter-intuitive
http://www.cpubenchmark.net/singleThread.html
2-)
Since the X845 has the highest single threaded performance, how did the 3 Athlons score very close results in the benchmark of the overall performance. Especially, since the the three processors have the same architecture, from the same generation ?! This also sounds very counter-intuitive. The three processors are supposed to be one family with scales of performance.
http://www.cpubenchmark.net/high_end_cpus.html
Sorry for the long thread
Thanks in advance
Regards