What Is A Good Cinebench Score

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Lahoma Jenkins

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Aug 3, 2024, 3:17:17 PM8/3/24
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This page hosts over 500+ Cinebench scores for releases R20, R23 and the brand-new 2024. Cinebench is a benchmarking tool created by Maxon that assesses the performance of a computer's CPU and GPU using real-world 3D rendering tasks. The results provide insights into a system's capability in rendering and graphics tasks.

The above are Multi Score benchmarks for over 250 processors. You can use the filters to refine your search or limit the number of results.
*: The score was calculated based on earlier benchmark versions. While these are less precise, they still provide a reasonable estimate of what the score might be.

The above are GPU benchmark scores for Cinebench versions with GPU support, which is currently limited to the newest (2024) release. We will keep this updated as new benchmarks come out.

At Drop & Render, we use these scores used to determine the pricing for your renders. We are an official Maxon Cinema 4D Render Farm, and we maintain these scores in order to provide the most accurate estimates for your render times and costs.

I got my CPU with my new Mobo a few weeks ago, everything is working fine and i have stellar performance in games ( atleast i think so ), i decided to run a cinebench R23 and 3D mark to see if my new cooler Z73 kraken is doing his office, and he is temps are great !

I found some tests on google about the 11900k and cinebenchR23 they are around 16209, with just ABT on, mine with same option is around 15602 but that's fine, the thing that is worrying me is a friend of mine have the same CPU as me and he also have ABT on, and his CPU score on 3dmark is about 14000, mine is only 12500 why is there such difference ?

Those tests don't tell in real life how the CPU performance is with real workload... There would be always differences in those performance tests... even for equal components... many other factors may alter the results... ABT (Turbo and other technologies) is not guarantee always equal... Mobo bios settings and power are also relevant...

I have some systems with different CPUs... For one of them, my nephew and I have the same CPU, same psu, same cooler, same case... and he gets lower temps, but I get better results in performance tests (and higher temps)... both are happy with our CPUs... having different results doesn't matter much if you are ok with the work the system does...

You are comparing different tools for tests... in the first one I see you are fine with the result.... but not with the second tool... if you test more and more test I guess you would have many many different results ranging from very good to very bad... For me, it doesn't worth to spend time in such as anguish...

And yes i checked my Silicon quality ( SP in asus bios ) and i'm only 50, i have the worst score possible which explain why when i did run C23 and 3dmark my CPU points were lower than average, but tbh as your post confirmed what i understood by myself it doesn't matter ...

To be honest i'm new to the whole CPU and benchmark thing i'm learning everyday, i'm just not lucky on my SP quality, my buddy prolly have 90 SP points or something to score that high on synthetic benchmark.

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Thank you all guys for helping me. Now it's all solved. It turned out that the problem was the Game Mode in Ryzen Master, an option that force the machine to use only half of cores and threads. I solved all doing a fresh install of WIN10 and reinstalling RM. I noticed that when i unlocked the last 6 core and 12 thread the temps have dropped significantly both in idle (32-38C) and under stress (see cinebench now, the cpu never gets hotter than 67/68C! And i hope this means that i've done a good work with thermal paste and airflow ahah! I hope this thread will be useful to other guys in the future.

i'm sorry but at the moment i'm not able to do that, the prev version of ryzen master said "your CPU is not supported" so i tryied to install the new one, but even following different ways i'm still not able to install it. i've read on a forum many other users have this issue, i tryied to change permissions to user but still nothing.

Thanks, bando995. What version of Windows are you running (winver in command prompt)? You could try this. Let us hear. Google has lots of hits on removing RM but some recommend a utility and I am cautious of them. Please open a support request. Thanks and enjoy, John.

I just finished removing all with the utility that @misterj linked me above, before trying to install again RM i'm going to do what you said. Once i set bios default i'll try cinebench again then i'll let you know! Thanks guys!

UPDATE: i set BIOS to default settings and enabled DOCP. I've done another run on cinebench and the results are slightly better but still an half of what they're expected to be. With RM there's no chance, again installation failed. i'm going to open a support ticket for this.

Thanks, bando995. I am sorry that did not fix RM. You can try one of the free monitors and post a SS. I still need to know what version of Windows you are running (winver in command prompt). If you are running W11 will you be willing to install W10? Just the fresh install will probably correct the RM problem. Thanks and enjoy, John.

Early this evening i sent a support request to AMD for the Ryzen Master thing, they said to wait up to 48h so i'll wait without any problem. At the moment my pc works fine, the 6900xt on full throttle is a beast and i'm very happy about it!

Thanks, bando995. You should backup what data you would like to keep, but I would recommend you not do an upgrade install. When the install is complete, please install RM and run CB R23 and post the two SSs. Enjoy, John.

One thing I notice is that CB23 is showing you have a 6 core 12 thread 5900X in the Your System column of CB23. That is probably some of the problem of low scoring, as far as fixing that, hopefully someone else can help you with that issue.

Thanks, bando995. You are throttling because of the red meters at the top. You can raise the limits on these in RM but will probably get a message about voiding your warranty. What was your final score? Thanks and enjoy, John

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.

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