My fastest cruncher, before I get a Conroe.
6252 double precision MIPS (Whetstone) per CPU
18463 integer MIPS (Dhrystone) per CPU
...in 64-bit FC5
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My fastest cruncher, before I get a Conroe.
6252 double precision MIPS (Whetstone) per CPU
18463 integer MIPS (Dhrystone) per CPU
...in 64-bit FC5
I decided to get off my lazy bum and do win2k. She's now benching at 2570/10919. I'm really hoping for 500 or so a day from her.Quote:
Originally Posted by Brock Landers
Would there be any benefit to really stripping windows out?
Oh yeah, it's a Barton at ~2.1 with 512MB of RAM.
I think this bench speaks for itself....3.5ghz at 1.45v (heat is an issue on air)
http://img56.imageshack.us/img56/211...ld35ghz9jt.jpg
Shelfpc2:
Floating point: 2631
Int: 11396
AXP@~2.1 512 MB DDR
It's going to share an Ethernet cable with the shelfpc above it. Oh well, big dumps are good I guess.
What motherboard and cooling are you using with that procssor?Quote:
Originally Posted by Brock Landers
A really crappy MSI K7N2-V and stock Barton HSF. The chip is a DL3TC 1800+. The BIOS doesn't facilitate any vcore or multi adjustment. C'est la vie. I'll take what I can get I guess, it's really better than nothing. I know with vcore that this chip would do more.
This is my 805 @ 3.6ghz undervolted to 1.24v and running on ubuntu 64bit linux, I haven't really tried to increase the clocks or volts yet so be prepared for more but i think this is more than reasonable for an extremely budget rig :D.
Mon 17 Jul 2006 13:57:38 BST||Benchmark results:
Mon 17 Jul 2006 13:57:38 BST|| Number of CPUs: 2
Mon 17 Jul 2006 13:57:38 BST|| 5301 double precision MIPS (Whetstone) per CPU
Mon 17 Jul 2006 13:57:38 BST|| 16736 integer MIPS (Dhrystone) per CPU
:toast:
Acer 8204 laptop with T2500 @ 2.0ghz:
2944 floating
11394 integer
with Merom 7400 at 2.16ghz:
3828 floating
17275 integer
(old benchmark) with Merom 7400 at 2.8ghz in my desktop PC:
4982.18 floating
22994.21 integer
----------------
All have the SSE2 optimizations. I would appreciate someone with a Yonah T2500 overclocked on the Aopen board to give their benchmarks.
Danger30Q, I would talk to Hassan I think he has a few Yonah's running Rosetta right now....
my new celeron cruncher:
4.73GHz
CPU type GenuineIntel
Intel(R) Celeron(R) D CPU 3.20GHz
Number of CPUs 1
Operating System Microsoft Windows XP
Home Edition, Service Pack 2, (05.01.2600.00)
Memory 1023.04 MB
Cache 976.56 KB
Measured floating point speed 5277.37 million ops/sec
Measured integer speed 18509.62 million ops/sec
Nice celly Raiden!
Here is my 'ho at stock speeds:
4527.02 Floating
20479.61 Integer
celeron@ 487Xmhz
CPU type GenuineIntel
Intel(R) Celeron(R) D CPU 3.20GHz
Number of CPUs 1
Operating System Microsoft Windows XP
Home Edition, Service Pack 2, (05.01.2600.00)
Memory 1023.04 MB
Cache 976.56 KB
Measured floating point speed 5428.93 million ops/sec
Measured integer speed 19003.47 million ops/sec
raiden
Wow. Do all of those Celerons OC like that? What cooling are you using?Quote:
Originally Posted by Raiden Zero
Dunno if they all oc like that since there should be some differences in oc between B1 and C1 step. ... but i dont think that mine is something special.Quote:
Originally Posted by mcflurry4321
Cooling is Thermaltake SonicTower+2*120mm fans.
i bet i can bench up to 5ghz or even more.
just need to get my a/c unit and lap the ihs.
(roestta 100% load ->62°C ^^)
raiden
CPU: AMD X2 4400+ @ 2.60
Ram: 2 x 1MB BH5 (2.5-3-2-6) @ 237Mhz
Chipset: NF4
Optimizations: SSE2
OS: Win XP SP2
# of Cpu's: 2
Measured floating point speed 4494 million ops/sec
Measured integer speed 14785 million ops/sec
Holy cow!Quote:
Originally Posted by Raiden Zero
ye, a bit too high :(Quote:
Originally Posted by mcflurry4321
btw: 4.8GHz 1.47Vc Prime2004 priority10->69°C lmao
I really love the 1.06-BIOS for my AOpen...
CPU: T7400 @ 3,12 GHz
RAM: 2 x 512 MB Syncmax @ 333 MHz 4-4-4-12
5.5.0
23.07.2006 10:16:59||Running CPU benchmarks
23.07.2006 10:17:58||Benchmark results:
23.07.2006 10:17:58|| Number of CPUs: 2
23.07.2006 10:17:58|| 5597 floating point MIPS (Whetstone) per CPU
23.07.2006 10:17:58|| 25707 integer MIPS (Dhrystone) per CPU
23.07.2006 10:17:58||Finished CPU benchmarks
Hey, i can nearly beat ur floating point MIPS per CPU with my Celeron 352 :DQuote:
Originally Posted by stummerwinter
CPU type GenuineIntel
Intel(R) Celeron(R) D CPU 3.20GHz
Number of CPUs 1
Operating System Microsoft Windows XP
Home Edition, Service Pack 2, (05.01.2600.00)
Memory 1023.05 MB
Cache 976.56 KB
Measured floating point speed 5529.52 million ops/sec
Measured integer speed 19386.57 million ops/sec
Running 4.95GHz, Thermaltake SonicTower, 71°C Load :stick:
Linux + core2 duo ownage :)
E6300 @ 7x486 = 3.4Ghz
8.2K/31K
Do you have win XP installed on that rig? Maybe we can bench with the same multiplier and mem timings to see if there is any benefit from the bigger cache. I doubt there is a noticable difference, but you never know.
And running something like 400mhz fsb or below would be nice. I only have pc667 ram that runs with 800 5 6 6 15 right now and I cant change ram timings above 400mhz with my asus :/ And I only have 512mb ram right now, so maybe we better wait until I get my gskill 1gb. Will install Linux on Friday, but I dont think I can run 48x fsb ;)
Now that I think about it, if you are using the Gigabyte,comparing it to the asus might be worth nothing as it has different internal timings.
Sure just tell me what fsb, ram timings to run and we will see :) But preferably 1GB or more because of bank interleaving. 512MB performance will always be a bit worse even at the same settings
E6400@3440 (8x430) 1.40V
Win2Kpro
6173 double precision MIPS (Whetstone) per CPU
28638 integer MIPS (Dhrystone) per CPU
Will do WinXPpro, Win2K3, and some flavor of 64-bit Linux when time permits.
Conroe at about 3.8 GHz
Measured floating point speed 6803.8 million ops/sec
Measured integer speed 31748.82 million ops/sec
Another allendale, e6400 @ 3.85Ghz
Linux
Score:
9.4K/35.4K