Pc Benchmark Cinebench

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Saurabh Cloudas

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Aug 3, 2024, 1:25:00 PM8/3/24
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Cinebench 2024 utilizes the power of Redshift, Cinema 4D's default rendering engine, to evaluate your computer's CPU and GPU capabilities. Cinebench 2024 is designed to accommodate a broad range of hardware configurations - while it seamlessly supports x86/64 architecture (Intel/AMD) on Windows and macOS, it also extends its reach to Apple Silicon on macOS and Arm64 CPUs on Windows, ensuring compatibility with the latest advancements in hardware technology. Additionally, Cinebench 2024 streamlines the benchmarking process by utilizing a consistent scene file for both CPU and GPU testing. Best of all: It's free!

Anyone who needs to evaluate hardware performance should add Maxon Cinebench to their testing arsenal. Any computer owner can evaluate their individual system, IT administrators can use Cinebench to help make purchase decisions, journalists can use the results in reviewing hardware and manufacturers can utilize the feedback to optimize their latest products. Cinebench offers a real-world benchmark that incorporates a user's common tasks when using Cinema 4D and Redshift to measure a system's performance.

Products included in our Maxon One suite of creative tools are based on the same rendering technology that is used in Cinebench. When creating in Maxon One, you will benefit from the industry leading rendering performance you have known from Cinebench and utilize your hardware's capabilities to the fullest. Maxon One is our all-in-one solution that combines the power of all our industry-leading 3D animation, motion graphics, filmmaking, digital sculpting and rendering software like Cinema 4D, Forger, Red Giant, Redshift, and ZBrush in an integrated package.

Cinebench is a real-world benchmark that evaluates your computer's hardware capabilities. For over a decade, Cinebench has been a popular tool to evaluate hardware performance and we use it extensively to test the latest CPUs on TechSpot reviews.

Cinebench 2024 (R24) is designed to accommodate a broad range of hardware configurations - while it seamlessly supports x86/64 architecture (Intel/AMD) on Windows and macOS, it also extends its reach to Apple Silicon on macOS and Arm64 CPUs on Windows, ensuring compatibility with the latest advancements in hardware technology.

Cinebench 2024 uses Redshift, Cinema 4D's rendering engine, to evaluate your computer's CPU and GPU capabilities. It's great for analyzing how well a CPU manages threads and memory. Cinebench can be configured to render scenes using a set amount of threads, starting with just 1 (essentially just one core of the CPU) all the way up to 256.

Anyone who needs to evaluate hardware performance can use Cinebench to run tests. Individuals can evaluate their system, IT administrators can use Cinebench to help make purchase decisions, journalists can use the results in reviewing hardware, and manufacturers can utilize the feedback to optimize their latest products. Cinebench offers a real-world benchmark that incorporates a user's common tasks while using Cinema 4D and Redshift to measure a system's performance.

Cinebench 2024 will not execute on unsupported processors. On systems lacking sufficient RAM to load the test scene, a warning will be displayed, and the CPU and/or GPU benchmark will not be executed.

The test scenario uses all of your system's processing power to render a photorealistic 3D scene (from the viral "No Keyframes" animation by AixSponza). This scene makes use of various algorithms to stress all available processor cores.

In fact, Cinebench can measure systems with up to 256 processor threads. This test scene contains approximately 2,000 objects which in turn contain more than 300,000 polygons in total, and uses sharp and blurred reflections, area lights, shadows, procedural shaders, antialiasing, and much more. The result is displayed in points (pts). The higher the number, the faster your processor.

This procedure uses a complex 3D scene depicting a car chase (created by renderbaron) which measures the performance of your graphics card in OpenGL mode. The performance depends on various factors, such as the GPU processor on your hardware, on the drivers used. The graphics card has to display a huge amount of geometry (nearly 1 million polygons) and textures, as well as a variety of effects, such as environments, bump maps, transparency, lighting and more to evaluate the performance across different disciplines and give a good average overview of the capabilities of your graphics hardware. The result is measured in frames per second (fps). The higher the number, the faster your graphics card is.

Anyone who needs to evaluate hardware performance should add Maxon Cinebench to the test tool arsenal.System administrators can use Cinebench to help make purchase decisions, journalists can use the results in reviewing hardware, hardware manufacturers may utilize the feedback in optimizing their latest products. Any computer owner can evaluate his or her individual system. Unlike abstract benchmarks, which only test specific functions of CPUs or GPUs, Cinebench offers a real-world benchmark that incorporates a user's common tasks within CINEMA 4D to measure a system's performance. For those who have to do a serious amount of testing Cinebench also provides a command line option, allowing users to run automated test procedures.

Maxon, developers of professional software solutions for editors, filmmakers, motion designers, visual effects artists and creators of all types, is thrilled to announce the highly anticipated release of Cinebench 2024. This latest iteration of the industry-standard benchmarking software, which has been a cornerstone in computer performance evaluation for two decades, sets a new standard for performance evaluation, embracing cutting-edge technology to provide artists, designers, and creators with a more accurate and relevant representation of their hardware capabilities.

Cinebench 2024 ushers in a new era by embracing the power of Redshift, Cinema 4D's default rendering engine. Unlike its predecessors, which utilized Cinema 4D's standard renderer, Cinebench 2024 utilizes the same render algorithms across both CPU and GPU implementations. This leap to the Redshift engine ensures that performance testing aligns seamlessly with the demands of modern creative workflows, delivering accurate and consistent results.

Cinebench 2024 reinstates GPU benchmarking, a feature absent from Cinebench for the past decade. The latest version not only evaluates CPU performance; it also provides insights into the GPU's capabilities, reflecting the evolving technological landscape of creative software and workflows.

Cinebench 2024 is designed to accommodate a broader range of hardware configurations. It seamlessly supports x86/64 architecture (Intel/AMD) on Windows and macOS, as well as Arm64 architecture to extend its reach to Apple silicon on macOS and Snapdragon compute silicon on Windows, ensuring compatibility with the latest advancements in hardware technology. Redshift GPU performance can be evaluated on systems with compatible Nvidia, AMD and Apple graphics processors.

Cinebench 2024 streamlines the benchmarking process by utilizing a consistent scene file for both CPU and GPU testing. This innovation enables users to discern the advantages of leveraging Redshift GPU, providing a real-world glimpse into the benefits of harnessing cutting-edge graphics hardware for rendering tasks.

Cinebench 2024 introduces a revamped user interface that enhances the user experience and showcases the incredible artistic endeavors achieved with the Redshift render engine in Cinema 4D. This dynamic interface serves as a testament to the potential of the Redshift engine while offering users a more intuitive and visually engaging experience.

Beyond the surface, Cinebench 2024 brings forth a host of performance-enhancing features. With a threefold increase in memory footprint compared to Cinebench R23, the software caters to the memory-intensive demands of modern projects. Moreover, a six-fold rise in computational effort and utilization of newer instruction sets ensures a benchmark that resonates with the complexity and sophistication of contemporary creative projects.

It's crucial to note that Cinebench 2024 scores cannot be directly compared to those of its predecessor, Cinebench R23. With the incorporation of Redshift, a different rendering engine, larger memory footprint, and more complex scenes, Cinebench 2024 offers a distinctly enhanced and accurate evaluation of modern hardware capabilities.

Cinebench R23 and Cinebench R20 is still widely used for testing, you can choose and download that by choosing the appropriate version in the download options menu. We also host Cinebench R15 for Windows and Mac for the same reasons.

It is constantly staying above 100C which is somewhat concerning. When I was compiling some software the fans maxed out but the cpu was still at 100.2C running at 4.2Ghz around. It stayed that high for like 5 minutes or more.

In addition, CPU performance is affected not just by temps but by your other components. In particular RAM running below 5600MT/s will have a significant impact, but I could see a slow SSD or other components also having some effect.

I did look at that post and someone mentioned scores that were also around 13500. I just wanted to see if the majority of users with the Ryzen 9 7940HS version of the Framework 16 were experiencing the same issues.

This user with a 7840HS says they got about 15k in R23 once support sent them a new mainboard with fixed thermal performance. They were only getting about 14k with their original board with large temperature deltas between cores. High Thermals on a 7840HS - #19 by Snipe

In some previous benchmarks, my CPU had around a 13 degree difference between the hottest core are 99.6 (Reaches even higher but that was the temp I took the screenshot at) and the lowest core at around 86.2 degrees. This is one of the screenshots I filed to support.

Please keep us posted on how your ticket goes. I have a 7840HS but I am seeing the same as you, an average delta of 13 degrees between my hottest and coldest cores under stress though it reaches as high as 16 degrees at its peak.

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