New Ryzen 5 7600X Cinebench R23 results show some interesting things about the upcoming processor. At stock settings, the mid-range Ryzen chip is only slightly faster than its predecessor. However, things change when Core Performance Boost is enabled, bringing a 14% performance boost in this benchmark.
VideoCardz has recently got hold of two screenshots showing the Cinebench R23 scores of a Ryzen 5 7600X sample with Core Performance Boost (CPB) turned off and on. In simple terms, this feature enables the CPU to boost when possible. All data was gathered with the CPU running on an X670E board with DDR5-6000 memory and the latest available BIOS. For cooling, the processor used a dual-fan AIO kit.
Image credit: VideoCardz
In the left image, the feature is turned off, hence why the clock speed is limited to 4.7GHz with 60W power consumption while running at 56ºC. Due to this limitation, the chip scores 1,681 points in the single-core test and 13,003 points in the multi-core. That's about 6% and 18% more than the Ryzen 5 5600X.
In the right image, CPB is turned on, allowing the chip to push up to 5.45GHz and consume 110W of power, leading the chip to hit temperatures north of 90ºC. At the cost of more power and higher temperatures, the chip achieved a single-core score of 1,920 points and a multi-core score of 14,767 points. Compared to its previous result, there's a 14% improvement in single-core performance and a 13.5% improvement in the multi-core test.
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KitGuru says: The scores achieved by the Ryzen 5 7600X with CPB enabled somewhat match what we've been seeing from the Core i5-13600K in CB R23 1T benchmark. However, due to the higher core count of the i5 chip, the Intel counterpart has a considerable lead in multi-core apps.