3D Rendering Performance

3dsmax 8 performance continues the performance trends we've seen; at default speeds the E4300 is slightly outperformed (2.5%) by the E6300, while it is around 14% faster than the Athlon 64 X2 3800+. Performance standings change a bit under Cinebench where AMD does better, with the X2 3800+ and E4300 offering similar performance.

3dsmax 8 - SPECapc Rendering Composite

Cinebench 9.5 - Multithreaded CPU Test

With 3D rendering depending largely on raw CPU speed, it's not surprising to see the overclock help out even more in these two benchmarks. The overclocked E4300 is 14-16% faster than the X6800, with a clock speed advantage of 15%. Larger caches and faster bus speeds only have a minimal impact here.

General Performance Encoding Performance
Comments Locked

68 Comments

View All Comments

  • hubajube - Wednesday, January 10, 2007 - link

    Nice OC and I might consider this instead of a E6400. I'll have to wait how the 4MB versions stack up. Also, I'd like to see how it OC's on a Nvidia chipset board. No DS3 for me.
  • tuteja1986 - Wednesday, January 10, 2007 - link

    Same
  • IntelUser2000 - Wednesday, January 10, 2007 - link

    The 4MB cache and faster FSB is good for performance, but also for raising stock performance from Intel's point of view. The extra cache and more bandwidth enables Core 2 Duo to scale better than the ones that don't. I would like to see E4300 at 800MHz FSB and clocked to say even E6600 speeds to see how it scales but I am expecting too much :P.

    E4300 at 3.38GHz has an FSB of 1500MHz, which is 40% more than the stock X6800.
  • IntelUser2000 - Wednesday, January 10, 2007 - link

    From the idle power consumption measurements, it seems to use the new Core 2 Duo steppings that has C1E power consumption of 12W. You can see 8W difference from the normal Core 2 Duos, which are at 20W-22W(20W for E6700 and 22W for others).
  • Goty - Wednesday, January 10, 2007 - link

    Yeah, but that doesn't matter to 99% of the desktop consumer market. Most only care about power consumption at full load as it is usually a good indication of heat output.
  • hubajube - Wednesday, January 10, 2007 - link

    quote:

    Most only care about power consumption at full load as it is usually a good indication of heat output.
    The only people that care about power consumption are geeks and corporate IT departments. Joe SixPack doesn't know and doesn't care. All they want is a machine that does email, stores porn, and surfs the web. You guys need to get out more often.
  • Xentropy - Wednesday, January 10, 2007 - link

    You can be sure even Joe SixPack will notice if turning on his PC sounds like a jet engine starting up, though, and higher power consumption means louder cooling solutions.
  • hubajube - Thursday, January 11, 2007 - link

    quote:

    You can be sure even Joe SixPack will notice if turning on his PC sounds like a jet engine starting up, though, and higher power consumption means louder cooling solutions.
    J6P still won't notice because they usually buy low rent Dell's and HP's not, custom built jobs like we have. Like I said, power consumption means nothing to regular computer buyers.

Log in

Don't have an account? Sign up now