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Athlon 64 Chipset Performance Analysis
Written by Peter Barnard, Spode (02/August/04)
Page 6 of 6

Untitled Document

Chipset Performance Comparison

Let's move on to some performance comparisons between the different chipsets on offer. We have used a range of tests, mostly focused on gaming, because this is the most common use for these boards. Just like the previous tests, these are tested on a 9800XT with no AA or AF.

Sisoft Sandra 2004
 
nForce 3 250
SiS 755
VIA K8T800
Memory Bandwidth
3023 MB/s
2524 MB/s
3021 MB/s

You can see here that the SiS chipset is lagging behind considerably. This is because our particular test board was buggy and would only run at 333MHz memory speed even when 400MHz is selected (despite the chipset being quite capable) and this will unfortunately skew the rest of the results. The nForce 3 and Via Chipset results show just how independent memory performance is of the north bridge.

Sysmark 2002
nForce 3 250
SiS 755
VIA K8T800
Internet Content Creation
368
356
353

Office Productivity

241
244
241


Sysmark results are incredibly close across the board, even on the SiS, showing how little disadvantage 333MHz memory gives. Results were averaged across 3 runs because there is as much as a 10 point variance in results, this makes it hard to draw any conclusions.

3D Mark
 
nForce 3 250
SiS 755
VIA K8T800
Overall 3D Mark
6454
6353
6467
CPU test 1 (800x600)
76.6
73.1
81.4
CPU test 2 (800x600)
10.9
10.1
11.3


Once again, we see very little difference, only enough to attribute to result variance. The Via chipset does seem to have a slight edge though.

UT2004 Software Mode
nForce 3 250
SiS 755
VIA K8T800
800x600
32.34
28.39
31.99
1024x768
21.99
21.00
23.98
1280x1024
17.25
14.90
17.07
1600x1200
12.99
11.17
12.86

This test really stresses the CPU and memory quite a considerable amount and due to the software rendering without letting the GPU hold it back. We can see results are very similar across the board, with nothing worth mentioning.

Far Cry
nForce 3 250
SiS 755
VIA K8T800
800x600
93.92
90.46
101.21
1024x768
94.21
90.80
101.79
1280x1024
92.68
90.40
101.32
1600x1200
80.02
79.97
81.54

Last of all, we have Far Cry performance. In the lower resolutions, the VIA chipset has a consistent lead of around 10% which is excellent. In 1600x1200 it is almost the same across the board, where the GPU becomes the limiting factor.

The results have been very interesting, in most cases variance in results can be attributed to the differences we are seeing. But, in Far Cry and 3DMark, the Via chipset certainly had a minor advantage. There was no advantage in the UT2004 software tests though, so we can assume that VIA either has better drivers, or a better AGP system, which is amusing considering nVidia specialise in making AGP solutions. We wonder if the results would have been the same if we had used an nVidia card instead of an ATi.

This graphical advantage will probably not actually help anyone in particular. Most people will push the game settings until the GPU is the limiting factor rather than the surrounding system, as is shown when running Far Cry at 1600x1200.

Conclusion

As you can quite clearly see, performance differences are small at best. Memory performance has nothing to do with the chipset and is entirely dependant on the performance of the memory itself. We can also conclude that HyperTransport implementation makes very little difference, as bandwidth is already in excess.

In realistic gaming situations, there are no measurable difference between the chipsets, since so much is GPU dependent. This is a good argument for saving as much money as you can on the motherboard, to spend on a better graphics card. If the last 1% of gaming performance is not your top priority, then it would be wisest to choose your motherboard entirely on features, quality and usability issues.

On the CPU front, an extra 200MHz showed an overall 8-9% performance increase, which translated to roughly 4-5% extra gaming performance. So think twice before shelling out an extra £50 for the next CPU jump when that could also be saved and put into a better graphics card. This is where the Semprons should offer excellent value for money.

Be sure to join our mailing list on the front page, to be informed of when our 10 motherboard group test will follow.


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