Intel Core i9-9980XE - SANDRA, PCMark, And GeekBench
Intel Core i9-9980XE
When the Windows installation was complete, we fully updated the OS, and installed all of the drivers necessary for our components. Auto-Updating and Windows Defender were then disabled, and we installed all of our benchmarking software, performed a disk clean-up, and cleared any temp and prefetch data. Finally, we enabled Windows Quiet Hours and let the systems reach an idle state before invoking a test.
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We began our testing with the latest version of SiSoftware's SANDRA 2018, the System ANalyzer, Diagnostic and Reporting Assistant. We ran four of the built-in sub-system tests that partially comprise the suite with Intel's latest processors (CPU Arithmetic, Multimedia, Cache and Memory, and Memory Bandwidth). All of the scores reported below were taken with the CPU running at its default settings, with 32GB of DDR4 RAM running at 2,666MHz, in quad-channel mode, on a Gigabyte Aorus X299 Gaming 7 Pro motherboard.
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In the GeekBench test, we're stressing only the CPU cores in a system (not graphics or GPU architecture), with both single and multi-threaded workloads. The tests are comprised of encryption processing, image compression, HTML5 parsing, physics calculations and other general purpose compute processing workloads.
* Threadripper 2970WX (b) results = Dynamic Local Mode Enabled, (c) results = 1/2 core mode with UMA Memory
The Core i9-9980XE pulled off a first-place finish in GeekBench's multi-threaded benchmark, besting every other Intel and AMD processor. Single-threaded performance was also strong, and trailed only the higher-clocked, Coffee Lake-based Core i7-8700K and
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* Threadripper 2970WX (b) results = Dynamic Local Mode Enabled, (c) results = 1/2 core mode with UMA Memory
PCMark 10 exhibited some anomalous behavior with the Core i9-9980XE. We expected the chip to slot in just in front of the Core i7-7980XE, but it ended up trailing significantly in terms of the overall score and a couple of the sub-tests. In the Essentials portion of the benchmark, however, the 9980XE led the pack. We suspect the chip wasn't turbo-ing properly in every test, because the supporting hardware was identical (we literally took the 7980XE out of the test rig and popped the 9980XE in). Regardless, for the relatively light-duty workloads in PCMark, the Core i9-9980XE is more than up to the task.