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Not clear about using Cinebench R23

Not clear about using Cinebench R23

J
JazyCraft
Junior Member
47
01-23-2020, 04:18 PM
#1
I just installed Cinebench R23 and performed the multi-core and single-core tests. There isn’t a start button next to the MP ratio. Once I finish a full pass, it displays my CPU ranking among other CPUs. When I open the file and close the program, my results aren’t saved anywhere I can locate them on my PC. If I hover over my CPU, it shows my multi-core and single-core scores. Is that all the information provided? I’ve watched videos of Cinebench that display a results screen with maximum temperature, CPU clock, etc., but those seem to be from older versions.

My performance was average: a multi-core score of 21363 and a single-core score of 1608. I’m not using PBO. According to MSI Afterburner, my maximum temperature never went above 68°C. My chip frequently reaches 4.9GHz. With such low temperatures, shouldn’t I have achieved a higher score? Shouldn’t it continue boosting until the temps rise too much?

Ryzen 5900x
Asus Crosshair VIII Dark Hero
MSI 3080 Gaming Z Trio
G. Skill Trident Neo 3600MHz CL16 32GB
Samsung 980 Pro M.2 1TB x 2
Seasonic Prime Titanium 850W
Thermaltake Water 3.0 Ultimate 360mm AIO
Corsair 780T Case
J
JazyCraft
01-23-2020, 04:18 PM #1

I just installed Cinebench R23 and performed the multi-core and single-core tests. There isn’t a start button next to the MP ratio. Once I finish a full pass, it displays my CPU ranking among other CPUs. When I open the file and close the program, my results aren’t saved anywhere I can locate them on my PC. If I hover over my CPU, it shows my multi-core and single-core scores. Is that all the information provided? I’ve watched videos of Cinebench that display a results screen with maximum temperature, CPU clock, etc., but those seem to be from older versions.

My performance was average: a multi-core score of 21363 and a single-core score of 1608. I’m not using PBO. According to MSI Afterburner, my maximum temperature never went above 68°C. My chip frequently reaches 4.9GHz. With such low temperatures, shouldn’t I have achieved a higher score? Shouldn’t it continue boosting until the temps rise too much?

Ryzen 5900x
Asus Crosshair VIII Dark Hero
MSI 3080 Gaming Z Trio
G. Skill Trident Neo 3600MHz CL16 32GB
Samsung 980 Pro M.2 1TB x 2
Seasonic Prime Titanium 850W
Thermaltake Water 3.0 Ultimate 360mm AIO
Corsair 780T Case

M
Mr_Floobiful
Posting Freak
890
01-25-2020, 02:26 AM
#2
I just saw a video showing someone using Task Manager to check CPU clock speed during a test. I tried the same method and got a maximum of 4.23 for multi-core and 4.82 for single-core. When I used Ryzen Master auto OC, my multi-core score dropped to 22345 and the single-core score fell to 1589.
M
Mr_Floobiful
01-25-2020, 02:26 AM #2

I just saw a video showing someone using Task Manager to check CPU clock speed during a test. I tried the same method and got a maximum of 4.23 for multi-core and 4.82 for single-core. When I used Ryzen Master auto OC, my multi-core score dropped to 22345 and the single-core score fell to 1589.