The baselines in question are #1950637 (20-11-23) and #1959825 (01-12-23). These are appended as PDF attachments.
Hardware is AMD Ryzen 9 5900x, MSI MPG Carbon Wi-fi Max X570, 4 x Patriot Viper Steel 3600 CL18 DDR4, Radeon RX 6950XT, and Seagate Firecuda 530 4Tb. Cooling is not a problem in any way, and neither is power, or a MB capable of handling what is requested.
The machine originally had an RX6600 fitted, but the 6950 XT was fitted prior to the first test, and so I added the 200 watt difference between the two graphics cards after the first test. PSU was 850 watts for first test and 1050 watts for second one; calculated peak power drawer is 690/920 for each test, and they are pessimistic numbers. I made changes to PBO between tests which basically increased TDC (21 amp over stock at socket) and EDC (5 amp over stock) while leaving PPT at around the 156-160 mark.
This is, apparently, the sweet spot for my ticket in the silicon lottery, and rather hilariously renders the much vaunted curved optimizer utterly useless!
My problem is this; the two baselines just don't make sense. As I didn't foresee the need to take screenshots at the time, the following is a simple table of the two so everyone can understand.
My understanding of the algorithm used to combine results is rudimentary, but my gut feeling as a system builder (and a 8088/8086/IA32/IA64 assembler programmer) of thirty years tells me that the Passmark numbers should be broadly the same, maybe the second one should even be a bit higher. I searched in vain for a simple spreadsheet for calculating a Passmark from bare category results, found nothing and so maybe I'll end up building one.
The basic inference is that 2D carries more weight than 3D, or else memory is over-weighted by quite a bit. But that ridiculous 3D result is above the Passmark average for a RTX 4090, for gods sake!
My back of an envelope calculations are that memory and 2D differences cost me around 420 marks, while processor, disk and 3D gains are around 560-580. So I would expect to see a result of circa 11930 for the second test (12000 would have been nice!)
Can you confirm (or deny) my suspicions as noted, please? Note I did not witness anything abnormal at all during the second test but I always test from bottom to top, and idly note the Passmark number as categories are completed. It seemed low coming up to the CPU tests at the end.
Several points became obvious during examination of individual test results.
Certain 2D tests do not respond at all well to increasing EDC, namely image rendering, image filters, windows interface and PDF rendering. In more general terms reducing TDC by 6 Amps and EDC by 13 Amps (PPT held constant at 156) is clearly beneficial across the board. (One should note that when the RX 6600 was in the same rig, it recorded a 2D score of 1470 and 3d score of 20700, both 30/35% above average).
Whereas the opposite is true for 3D tests. First I pushed the CPU until it was 11.5% over the Passmark 5900x average, then the RX 6950 XT had it's GPU and memory frequencies ramped up and a 20% power boost added (it's now drawing 363watts at peak! against 330 stock). So the GPU peaks at 2770Mz (+400), the GDDR6 at 2370Mz (+120), and it's all as stable as can be! (Most remarkably, it's a cheap Chinese card (XFX of all people) which cost me a princely £499.99; brand names in UK charge around £770-900 for the same card). No matter how much juice you throw at it, this CPU/GPU combination always finds a use for, and not as heat, either. Running HWInfo it transpired that your test suite didn't push the CPU above 67C, nor the GPU Hot Spot over 80C. Yes, I have a huge Phanteks Tower Case, but everything is still air-cooled. CPU idles at 29-31C, GPU nearer 27-28C
As for the memory, it's CL 18, so you can't push it very far, and overvolting simply slows it down. But Patriot Viper Steel is more than reliable enough, which is why I use it. Still upping the processor draw slowed the memory controller; may be2x32 is better than 4x16 on MSI boards.
Version 10 disk tests made me laugh. The Seagate runs 7300/6900 read/write on Crystal Disk Test and 7000/6800 on Passmark V11; on Passmark V10.2 you report 4200 read (both tests) and better write results on the second test 4700 v 5000, which more power on the CPU should give. I assume that V10 was written before Phison E-18 controllers existed in the wild? On V11 the Seagate's read mark is 7062, currently the highest recorded, so reported 4200 is clearly not correct!
All in all it's been a very useful exercise; I've come to appreciate AMD's Ryzen design as never before (and how their documentation has improved down the years). The Intel/Nvidia strategy of designing in high power consumption in order to avoid having to think about solving problems stands in stark contrast to viewing the GPU/CPU pair as partners in a joint venture. Integrating the pair on one cheap will never work alas; the Ryzen "G" chips are limited because they generate too much heat. As specified they are perfectly satisfactory office machines, and a friend uses one as such, but you'd never want to game on one.
The best bit? This isn't even a gaming rig. but a private FTP server, with 8 x 8 TB Toshiba N300 NAS drives in two four spindle 32 TB RAID 0 arrays; array to array backups (the purpose of the second array) exceed 55 GB a minute. So why fit a RX 6950? Because I love Flight Sim, and it lets me run with every graphics option turned on!
Hardware is AMD Ryzen 9 5900x, MSI MPG Carbon Wi-fi Max X570, 4 x Patriot Viper Steel 3600 CL18 DDR4, Radeon RX 6950XT, and Seagate Firecuda 530 4Tb. Cooling is not a problem in any way, and neither is power, or a MB capable of handling what is requested.
The machine originally had an RX6600 fitted, but the 6950 XT was fitted prior to the first test, and so I added the 200 watt difference between the two graphics cards after the first test. PSU was 850 watts for first test and 1050 watts for second one; calculated peak power drawer is 690/920 for each test, and they are pessimistic numbers. I made changes to PBO between tests which basically increased TDC (21 amp over stock at socket) and EDC (5 amp over stock) while leaving PPT at around the 156-160 mark.
This is, apparently, the sweet spot for my ticket in the silicon lottery, and rather hilariously renders the much vaunted curved optimizer utterly useless!
My problem is this; the two baselines just don't make sense. As I didn't foresee the need to take screenshots at the time, the following is a simple table of the two so everyone can understand.
Baseline | 1950637 | 1959825 |
Passmark | 11736 | 11144 |
CPU | 43373 | 43840 |
2D | 1635 | 1461 |
3D | 37318 | 38993 |
Memory | 3734 | 3707 |
Disk | 48268 | 49435 |
The basic inference is that 2D carries more weight than 3D, or else memory is over-weighted by quite a bit. But that ridiculous 3D result is above the Passmark average for a RTX 4090, for gods sake!
My back of an envelope calculations are that memory and 2D differences cost me around 420 marks, while processor, disk and 3D gains are around 560-580. So I would expect to see a result of circa 11930 for the second test (12000 would have been nice!)
Can you confirm (or deny) my suspicions as noted, please? Note I did not witness anything abnormal at all during the second test but I always test from bottom to top, and idly note the Passmark number as categories are completed. It seemed low coming up to the CPU tests at the end.
Several points became obvious during examination of individual test results.
Certain 2D tests do not respond at all well to increasing EDC, namely image rendering, image filters, windows interface and PDF rendering. In more general terms reducing TDC by 6 Amps and EDC by 13 Amps (PPT held constant at 156) is clearly beneficial across the board. (One should note that when the RX 6600 was in the same rig, it recorded a 2D score of 1470 and 3d score of 20700, both 30/35% above average).
Whereas the opposite is true for 3D tests. First I pushed the CPU until it was 11.5% over the Passmark 5900x average, then the RX 6950 XT had it's GPU and memory frequencies ramped up and a 20% power boost added (it's now drawing 363watts at peak! against 330 stock). So the GPU peaks at 2770Mz (+400), the GDDR6 at 2370Mz (+120), and it's all as stable as can be! (Most remarkably, it's a cheap Chinese card (XFX of all people) which cost me a princely £499.99; brand names in UK charge around £770-900 for the same card). No matter how much juice you throw at it, this CPU/GPU combination always finds a use for, and not as heat, either. Running HWInfo it transpired that your test suite didn't push the CPU above 67C, nor the GPU Hot Spot over 80C. Yes, I have a huge Phanteks Tower Case, but everything is still air-cooled. CPU idles at 29-31C, GPU nearer 27-28C
As for the memory, it's CL 18, so you can't push it very far, and overvolting simply slows it down. But Patriot Viper Steel is more than reliable enough, which is why I use it. Still upping the processor draw slowed the memory controller; may be2x32 is better than 4x16 on MSI boards.
Version 10 disk tests made me laugh. The Seagate runs 7300/6900 read/write on Crystal Disk Test and 7000/6800 on Passmark V11; on Passmark V10.2 you report 4200 read (both tests) and better write results on the second test 4700 v 5000, which more power on the CPU should give. I assume that V10 was written before Phison E-18 controllers existed in the wild? On V11 the Seagate's read mark is 7062, currently the highest recorded, so reported 4200 is clearly not correct!
All in all it's been a very useful exercise; I've come to appreciate AMD's Ryzen design as never before (and how their documentation has improved down the years). The Intel/Nvidia strategy of designing in high power consumption in order to avoid having to think about solving problems stands in stark contrast to viewing the GPU/CPU pair as partners in a joint venture. Integrating the pair on one cheap will never work alas; the Ryzen "G" chips are limited because they generate too much heat. As specified they are perfectly satisfactory office machines, and a friend uses one as such, but you'd never want to game on one.
The best bit? This isn't even a gaming rig. but a private FTP server, with 8 x 8 TB Toshiba N300 NAS drives in two four spindle 32 TB RAID 0 arrays; array to array backups (the purpose of the second array) exceed 55 GB a minute. So why fit a RX 6950? Because I love Flight Sim, and it lets me run with every graphics option turned on!
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