.:::::Galaxy S4 Benchmarks thread:::::.

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daogiahieu

Senior Member
Jun 4, 2013
636
145
GT-I9500 with nevermore kernel and FF rom v6
That is the highest score i have ever had.
 

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georgemei

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Dec 1, 2015
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Latest CM from kyasu, battery profile balanced!, antutu v6.3.3 score 67331 for the S4 I9506 LTE-A edition, everything stock including the kernel.
 

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  • 15





    here is video from phonearena but cpu look throttled on Antutu



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    GLbenchmark

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    from GSMarena review :

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    those benchmarks are really on the Qualcomm S600 version ( GT-I9505 )
    7
    Ok, for my I9500, I did benchmarks for both 1600 Mhz (which would run A15) and 600 Mhz (this would use A7, effectively 1200 Mhz)

    A15 1600 Mhz

    3DMark and 3DMark xtreme



    Antutu, Kraken, RiaBench Focus, SunSpider





    A7 600Mhz (effectively 1200 Mhz)

    Antutu, Kraken, RiaBench Focus, SunSpider



    To sum up:

    A15:
    Antutu:28086, Kraken:6392ms, RiaBench Focus:1468ms, SunSpider:652.4ms

    A7:
    Antutu:18272, Kraken:20113ms, RiaBench Focus:3171ms, SunSpider:1464.8ms


    The Exynos 5 octa is a beast indeed :) Its A15 cores' numbers are a little less than half of what my Core 2 Duo 8500 reaches :D

    The A7 is pretty good as well, If I'm not mistaken these numbers are just shy of what the SGS III exynos (A9 cores) can reach

    So I believe you can easily cap your SGSIV to 600Mhz so it only uses the A7 cores (in order so save some battery), if you're not using heavy games or CPU intensive apps (heavy browsing, photo editing).
    5
    PowerVR SGX 544 MP3:

    atapy3yp.jpg


    Like a Boss :cool:

    Envoyé depuis mon GT-I9500 avec Tapatalk
    5
    This may be the wrong place to post, but I'm a little uncertain as to how the 2-quad cores work. Do they, or will they ever work together for an 8-core experience or is it one or the other depending on demand, such as the 1.8 for games and intense processes and the 1.2 for those programs requiring less and thus increasing battery life?
    Also, just a side note, my GS3 runs smooth at 2.1ghz (albeit a bit of a hit to battery life), that's a 30% jump over stock. If the Qual 1.9 can do the same, that's somewhere in the neighborhood of 2.5-2.7ghz!! That now makes my phone, my phone, mind you, more powerful than my desktop computer! :eek:

    You can read the documentation on Samsung website.
    There are 3 implementations can be used
    - "Quad-core switch": only two different states switching each other, quad-core A7 an quad-core A15
    - "Power-house": At the max point, all 8 cores are running. Redundant core can be closed if there is no task needing it.
    - "Paired core": Most likely implementation. Each A15 core is paired to an A7 core. The system will decide either to run depending on the task. So We can have A7-A7-A7-A7, A7-A15-A7-A7 to A15-A15-A15-A15. Each core has the independent clockrate,

    Samsung said that all of them are available in Exynos Octa, but the implementation used depends on the firmware, and most likely the last one is used in GS4. The "power-house" option may be available in a new Chromebook?
    4
    What is it that you all love about benchmarks on phones? I don't get it as you wont see the difference in real life use. My missing something here that I should be excited about or is it just a geek thing ;)

    here