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Engineering Sample 506E8 3GHz vs Core i5-7300U


Description
Both models 506E8 3GHz and i5-7300U are based on Kaby Lake architecture.

The first Kaby Lake CPU was released in August 2016. It uses a 14 nm process and was the first architecture in breaking the previous tick-tock model. Actually, it is not that different from the preceding Skylake: it has 64kB of L1 cache and 256kB L2 cache per core.

Using the multithread performance as a reference, the 506E8 3GHz gets a score of 210.9 k points while the i5-7300U gets 109.1 k points.

Summarizing, the 506E8 3GHz is 1.9 times faster than the i5-7300U. To get a proper comparison between both models, take a look to the data shown below.

Specs
CPUID
506e8
806e9
Core
Kaby Lake
Kaby Lake-U
Architecture
Base frecuency
3 GHz
2.6 GHz
Boost frecuency
3.5 GHz
3.5 GHz
Socket
LGA 1151
BGA1356
Cores/Threads
4/8
2/4
TDP
- W
15 W
Cache L1 (d+i)
4x32+4x32 kB
2x32+2x32 kB
Cache L2
4x256 kB
2x256 kB
Cache L3
8192 kB
3072 kB
Date
June 2016
January 2017
Mean monothread perf.
58.05k points
48.25k points
Mean multithread perf.
210.91k points
109.1k points

AVX2 optimized benchmark
The benchmark in mode III (AVX2), like AVX1, is optimized to used 256 bits registers beside the second version of the Advanced Vector Extensions (AVX). The first AVX2 compatible CPU was released in 2013.
Monothread
506E8 3GHz
i5-7300U
Test#1 (Integers)
22.46k
20.18k (x0.9)
Test#2 (FP)
20.45k
18.57k (x0.91)
Test#3 (Generic, ZIP)
4.75k
4.24k (x0.89)
Test#1 (Memory)
10.39k
5.25k (x0.51)
TOTAL
58.05k
48.25k (x0.83)

Multithread

506E8 3GHz

i5-7300U
Test#1 (Integers)
92.69k
47.75k (x0.52)
Test#2 (FP)
90.45k
44.82k (x0.5)
Test#3 (Generic, ZIP)
22.02k
10.82k (x0.49)
Test#1 (Memory)
5.75k
5.7k (x0.99)
TOTAL
210.91k
109.1k (x0.52)

Performance/W
506E8 3GHz
i5-7300U
Test#1 (Integers)