CPU Performance, Short Form

For our motherboard reviews, we use our short form testing method. These tests usually focus on if a motherboard is using MultiCore Turbo (the feature used to have maximum turbo on at all times, giving a frequency advantage), or if there are slight gains to be had from tweaking the firmware. We leave the BIOS settings at default and memory at JEDEC (DDR4-2133 C15) for these tests, making it very easy to see which motherboards have MCT enabled by default.

Video Conversion – Handbrake v0.9.9: link

Handbrake is a media conversion tool that was initially designed to help DVD ISOs and Video CDs into more common video formats. For HandBrake, we take two videos (a 2h20 640x266 DVD rip and a 10min double UHD 3840x4320 animation short) and convert them to x264 format in an MP4 container.  Results are given in terms of the frames per second processed, and HandBrake uses as many threads as possible.

Handbrake v0.9.9 H.264 Encoding: 640x266 Film

Handbrake v0.9.9 H.264 Encoding: 3840x4320 Animation

Compression – WinRAR 5.0.1: link

Our WinRAR test from 2013 is updated to the latest version of WinRAR at the start of 2014. We compress a set of 2867 files across 320 folders totaling 1.52 GB in size – 95% of these files are small typical website files, and the rest (90% of the size) are small 30 second 720p videos.

WinRAR 5.0.1 Compression Test

Point Calculations – 3D Movement Algorithm Test: link

3DPM is a self-penned benchmark, taking basic 3D movement algorithms used in Brownian Motion simulations and testing them for speed. High floating point performance, MHz and IPC wins in the single thread version, whereas the multithread version has to handle the threads and loves more cores. For a brief explanation of the platform agnostic coding behind this benchmark, see my forum post here.

3DPM: Movement Algorithm Tester (1 Thread)

3DPM: Movement Algorithm Tester (10^4 Threads)

Image Manipulation – FastStone Image Viewer 4.9: link

Similarly to WinRAR, the FastStone test us updated for 2014 to the latest version. FastStone is the program I use to perform quick or bulk actions on images, such as resizing, adjusting for color and cropping. In our test we take a series of 170 images in various sizes and formats and convert them all into 640x480 .gif files, maintaining the aspect ratio. FastStone does not use multithreading for this test, and thus single threaded performance is often the winner.

FastStone Image Viewer 4.9: Image Conversion

Rendering – PovRay 3.7: link

The Persistence of Vision RayTracer, or PovRay, is a freeware package for as the name suggests, ray tracing. It is a pure renderer, rather than modeling software, but the latest beta version contains a handy benchmark for stressing all processing threads on a platform. We have been using this test in motherboard reviews to test memory stability at various CPU speeds to good effect – if it passes the test, the IMC in the CPU is stable for a given CPU speed. As a CPU test, it runs for approximately 2-3 minutes on high end platforms.

POV-Ray 3.7 Render Benchmark (Multi-Threaded)

Synthetic – 7-Zip 9.2: link

As an open source compression tool, 7-Zip is a popular tool for making sets of files easier to handle and transfer. The software offers up its own benchmark, to which we report the result.

7-Zip 9.2 Compress/Decompress Benchmark

System Performance Gaming Performance 2015
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  • zeeBomb - Friday, November 27, 2015 - link

    Whoa!!!
  • dsumanik - Thursday, December 17, 2015 - link

    AT Theres a typo in the headline, here's the correction:

    The ASRock Z170 Extreme7+ Review: When You Don't Test The Headline Feature Of The Motherboard.

    Otherwise knows as: We didn't do our job, but trust us it's awesome and buy it anyways.

    Seriously AT?

    *Facepalm
  • daos - Friday, December 18, 2015 - link

    I completely agree! Hasn't been the same since Anand left
  • pedjache - Friday, November 27, 2015 - link

    In one of AT's previous articles, it was stated that the gtx770 used in tests gave odd results in Shadow of Mordor while the network connection was on, and said the matter will be looked into and reported. Anything on that?
    (more) on topic - nice review, wonderful motherboard, and kudos for praising them engineers, I happen to know they love and can't get enough of it.
  • Ian Cutress - Friday, November 27, 2015 - link

    Still looking into it.
  • flameyyy - Saturday, November 28, 2015 - link

    do the DPC latency issues have anything to do with the bugged intel networking drivers? https://communities.intel.com/thread/54594
  • evilspoons - Friday, November 27, 2015 - link

    The Board Features/Visual Inspection page appears to be blank except for an introductory paragraph, as of 10:32 AM mountain time.
  • evilspoons - Friday, November 27, 2015 - link

    Also, it's a shame the headlining feature (triple M2 x4 in RAID) wasn't actually benchmarked. I would have loved to see 3x Samsung 950 Pro drives jammed in this sucker.
  • eddieobscurant - Friday, November 27, 2015 - link

    They will all share the same pci 3.0 x4 lanes, so there is a cap at 3.2 gb/s for the raid array. The thessdreview has a review of this combination.
  • Flunk - Friday, November 27, 2015 - link

    That's GB/s, which is 8x as much.

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