Terragen 3

Website:Terragen 3

Planetside Software’s Terragen 2 is a highly realistic landscape generator used to create background images in films and games such as Star Trek: Nemesis, Stealth and The Imaginarium of Dr. Parnassus. Our script renders a single frame of a snowy mountain scene at 640 x 480 on all the available CPU execution units.

Terragen 3

Snowy scene render time

  • Asus X99 Deluxe (3GHz/4.25GHz)
  • Gigabyte GA-X99-Gaming 5 (3GHz/4.2GHz)
  • MSI X99S SLI Plus (3GHz/4.3GHz)
  • ASRock Fatal1ty X99M Killer (3GHz/4.3GHz)
  • EVGA X99 Micro (3GHz/4.2GHz)
    • 321
    • 277
    • 330
    • 271
    • 335
    • 267
    • 337
    • 268
    • 338
    • 269
0
50
100
150
200
250
300
350
Seconds, lower is better
  • Stock
  • Overclocked

Cinebench R15 64-bit

Website: www.maxon.net

Cinebench uses Maxon's Cinema 4D engine to render a photo-realistic scene of some shiny balls and weird things (we miss the motorbike). The scene is highly complex, with reflections, ambient occlusion and procedural shaders so it gives a CPU a tough workout.

As Cinema 4D is a real-world application - used on films such as Spider-Man and Star Wars - Cinebench can be viewed as a real-world benchmark.

Cinebench R15

64-bit, CPU test

  • Asus X99 Deluxe (3GHz/4.25GHz)
  • Gigabyte GA-X99-Gaming 5 (3GHz/4.2GHz)
  • ASRock Fatal1ty X99M Killer (3GHz/4.3GHz)
  • MSI X99S SLI Plus (3GHz/4.3GHz)
  • EVGA X99 Micro (3GHz/4.2GHz)
    • 1403
    • 1684
    • 1376
    • 1612
    • 1331
    • 1686
    • 1330
    • 1698
    • 1312
    • 1674
0
250
500
750
1000
1250
1500
1750
Score, higher is better
  • Stock Speed
  • Overclocked

Power consumption

For the power consumption tests, we measure via a power meter at the wall, so the numbers below are of total system power draw from the mains, not the power consumption of a CPU itself. Measuring the power draw of any individual component in a PC is tricky to impossible to acheive. We use Prime95's smallFFT test to put the CPU under 100 load, while idle power results were taken with the PC sitting at a Windows Aero-enabled desktop.

With many LGA2011-v3 motherboards still having issues running memory above 2,600MHz without forcing the CPU strap to 125MHz and increasing power consumption as a result, we also add absolute default idle power consumption to the graphs using 2,133MHz memory too. Here, we literally set the memory speed and that's it. This will give you an indication of how much of a power saving you'll make if you opt for cheaper memory and run your CPU at stock speed.

Power Consumption (Idle)

Windows Aero enabled

  • Gigabyte GA-X99-Gaming 5 (2,133MHz RAM)
  • ASRock Fatal1ty X99M Killer (2,133MHz RAM)
  • Gigabyte GA-X99-Gaming 5 (3GHz/4.2GHz)
  • MSI X99S SLI Plus (2,133MHz RAM)
  • ASRock Fatal1ty X99M Killer (3GHz/4.3GHz)
  • EVGA X99 Micro (2,133MHz RAM)
  • MSI X99S SLI Plus (3GHz/4.3GHz)
  • EVGA X99 Micro (3GHz/4.2GHz)
  • Asus X99 Deluxe (2,133MHz RAM)
  • Asus X99 Deluxe (3GHz/4.25GHz)
    • 70
    • 0
    • 74
    • 0
    • 86
    • 100
    • 86
    • 0
    • 86
    • 110
    • 89
    • 0
    • 90
    • 97
    • 90
    • 128
    • 106
    • 0
    • 127
    • 151
0
25
50
75
100
125
150
Watts, lower is better
  • Stock Speed
  • Overclocked

Power Consumption (Load)

Windows Aero enabled

  • MSI X99S SLI Plus (3GHz/4.3GHz)
  • EVGA X99 Micro (3GHz/4.2GHz)
  • Gigabyte GA-X99-Gaming 5 (3GHz/4.2GHz)
  • ASRock Fatal1ty X99M Killer (3GHz/4.3GHz)
  • Asus X99 Deluxe (3GHz/4.25GHz)
    • 233
    • 465
    • 236
    • 422
    • 243
    • 397
    • 264
    • 508
    • 314
    • 478
0
100
200
300
400
500
Watts, lower is better
  • Stock Speed
  • Overclocked

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