Dabei ist jedoch die entscheidende Preisfrage, ob der Ryzen mit 3,4Ghz ohne Turbo lief, oder ob er korrekt mit ,4GHZ Basistakt und 3,8GHZ Turbo lief. Denn angezeigt wird in der Spalte Turbo nur "N/A"
"The tests include integer math, floating point performance, prime numbers, encryption, compression, sorting, SSE performance and physics. The AMD Ryzen 7 1700X outperformed every other CPU in 5 out of the 8 tests. Including both of Intel’s $1099 8 core Broadwell-E i7 6900K. In comparison to Intel’s $999 8 core extreme edition Haswell-E i7 5960X, Ryzen was faster in 6 out of the 8 tests. The 1700X showed particularly good performance in integer math and encryption. Which bodes well for Zen’s competitiveness in the enterprise and server markets."
Ryzen’s Single Threaded Performance – AMD Back In Gaming
Let’s move on to the last and perhaps most important benchmark we have. Passmark’s single-threaded performance test. This has always been AMD’s Achilles heel and why its CPUs have struggled to compete with Intel in gaming performance. Has Jim Keller and his team really been able to close the gap in one generation that has taken Intel four generations to build? This is the moment of truth.