Review: Gigabyte G1.Assassin

Published by Marc Büchel on 08.09.11
Page:
« 1 ... 7 8 9 (10) 11 12 13 »

Super Pi 1M / 32M, wPrime

Meanwhile Super Pi even in its latest version has become pretty old. Never the less it is able to show scaling to the clock speed nicely.

Super Pi 1M

Super Pi 1.5 XS - 1M sec Percent
MSI Big Bang XPower 12.230 98.86 %
Asus Rampage III Extreme 12.254 99.05 %
Gigabyte GA X58A-UD9 12.292 99.36 %
Gigabyte X58A-OC 12.340 99.75 %
ASUS Rampage III Extreme 12.340 99.75 %
Gigabyte G1.Assassin 12.356 99.88 %
Asus P6T6 WS Revolution 12.371 100.00 %
  less is better


wPrime 32M

wPrime is based on a multithreaded algorithm to calculate the square root to up to 32 billion digits. Therefore it is possible to put 100 percent load on every core or thread and to see differences between architectures.

wPrime - 32M sec Percent
ASUS Rampage III Black Edition 5.01 98.24 %
Asus Rampage III Extreme 5.03 98.63 %
Gigabyte GA X58A-UD9 5.07 99.41 %
Asus P6T6 WS Revolution 5.10 100.00 %
MSI Big Bang XPower 5.13 100.65 %
Gigabyte X58A-OC 5.63 110.39 %
Gigabyte G1.Assassin 5.68 111.37 %
  less is better


Page 1 - Introduction Page 8 - SiSoft Sandra 1
Page 2 - Specifications / Delivery Page 9 - SiSoft Sandra 2
Page 3 - Layout Page 10 - Super Pi / wPrime
Page 4 - Connectors and I/O Page 11 - Games
Page 5 - BIOS Page 12 - Overclocking
Page 6 - Test setup Page 13 - Conclusion
Page 7 - Futuremark  



Discuss this article in the forums




Navigate through the articles
Previous article Layout and Design: Gigabyte G1.Assassin
comments powered by Disqus

Review: Gigabyte G1.Assassin - Motherboards > Intel > X58 - Reviews - ocaholic