SYSmark 2004

SYSmark 2004 Overall

When running at 2.4GHz, the FX architecture drives past everything else. We are seeing that the 939 pin FX53 is a little bit slower than the 940 pin version. This is not the norm for our benchmarks, as we will see, but the socket 940 solutions do manage to pull slightly ahead in some tests. Our theory on this is that the build quality of a 940 board is a little higher as it is intended to be a workstation or server platform. And, of course, we are using the very high performance SK8V board as our 940 platform. The 3500+ is outperforming the 3400+ as expected.

SYSmark 2004 Internet Content Creation

The content creation suite of SYSmark 2004 shows that the 3800+ and FX-53 939 parts are very similar in performance, meaning that cache size has little impact on this benchmark (as the only difference between those two processors is 512kB of cache).

SYSmark 2004 Office Productivity

We see the same trends in Office productivity that we saw in the content creation suite, with the exception of the fact that the FX-53 pulls a little further ahead of the 3800+ (showing that cache size is a little more important in this test.

The Test Business and Content Creation
Comments Locked

38 Comments

View All Comments

  • Icewind - Tuesday, June 1, 2004 - link

    Slight gramatical problem here......

    As we have mentioned in previous news articles, these new CPUs will run at the 3500+ will run at 2.2GHz while the 3800+ and FX-53 will run at 2.4 GHz each.


    I think you wanted to say "These new CPU"S will be starting at the 3500+ model running at 2.2ghz to the 3800+ running at 2.4ghz."




  • Viditor - Tuesday, June 1, 2004 - link

    "I have updated the article to reflect the fact that we did indeed run our tests with 1T timings on the MSI K8T800 Pro 939 board"

    Thanks Derek...that's why I always read you guys!
  • WBurton - Tuesday, June 1, 2004 - link

    I'm getting a bit frustrated with the Sponsored Links constantly crashing my Opera 7.x. It'd be nice to review an article without having to reboot all the time.
  • MIDIman - Tuesday, June 1, 2004 - link

    Is it possible that the release of a 64-bit OS will change all of these numbers and conlcusions?
  • Lonyo - Tuesday, June 1, 2004 - link

    1066MHz HT bus?
    I thought the HT bus ram 200xmult
    So isn't it 200x5, or 1000MHz?
    (Typo on the first page?)
  • boban10 - Tuesday, June 1, 2004 - link

    what i dont like about many review sites that they encoding always the same codec and then say p4 is faster.
    well look here how they test it:

    http://www.extremetech.com/article2/0,1558,1603531...

    i hope that your and anandtech next reviews will be more in depth about encoding, cause if people read your reviews about encoding they will buy p4.
    but p4 is not faster in all encoding and that is important to say and test. and i like this site, but if next time i see again only one test in encoding (and that where is know that p4 win) then i will not read your page anymore. and no im not amd fan, im performance fan.
  • mechBgon - Tuesday, June 1, 2004 - link

    Jeff7181, you asked "Is running four unbuffered DIMMs really that necessary?"

    I was running three 512MB modules on my A7N8X Deluxe before replacing it with my K8V Deluxe. That was working out nicely for what I was using it for. When I installed my A64 and K8V Deluxe, I stepped *down* to 1.0GB because if I used all three modules, it would want to run them at DDR200/PC1600 speeds. If I could add a fourth module for 2.0GB total, that would be a welcome improvement. Yeah, I could invest in two 1GB DIMMs, I guess...

    Intel's i865 and i875 families have brought 4 DDR400 DIMMs to Pentium4 owners, and that capability, along with CSA Gigabit, are two places where I have to admit Intel trumped AMD & Co. nicely, and has kept them trumped for quite a while too. So it would be nice to see AMD get their mojo working here.
  • DerekWilson - Tuesday, June 1, 2004 - link

    I have updated the article to reflect the fact that we did indeed run our tests with 1T timings on the MSI K8T800 Pro 939 board.

    I appologize for the omission.
  • Viditor - Tuesday, June 1, 2004 - link

    I wonder if Derek caught the bios setting tweak that Aces found.

    "An incredible difference: with a faster bus turnaround, the memory subsystem is able to serve up to 24% more bandwidth, and the latency goes down from 51 (21.25 ns) to 47 cycles (19.6 ns). This results in measurable real world performance gains:

    In 3DS Max 5.1, we gained 3% of performance
    In Medieval War, Comanche we also gained 3%
    In Wolfenstein: Enemy Territory, we gained 5.5%
    In WinRAR and Plasma, the performance advantage was no less than 9%"

    http://www.aceshardware.com/read.jsp?id=65000305
  • nycxandy - Tuesday, June 1, 2004 - link

    Which motherboard was used for the 939 processors?

Log in

Don't have an account? Sign up now