MSI 694D Pro Dual Socket-370 Apollo Pro133A ATX
by Mike Andrawes on April 9, 2001 1:03 AM EST- Posted in
- Motherboards
CliBench: Back to Basics
CliBench Mk III SMP 0.7.10 is a low level, synthetic benchmark targeted at multiple processor systems. The size of the CliBench Mk III SMP 0.7.10 is just about 500KB, and it contains eight major tests: Dhrystones, Whetstones, Eight Queens, Matrix Operations, Number Crunching, Floating Point Unit, Memory Throughput, and Disk Throughput.
The CliBench Mk III SMP 0.7.10 is a very powerful test since it supports up to 128 processors, which is way more than we need here. Before you start the test, it will ask you to put in the number of threads you want to start, with the recommendation that you start as many threads as as you have processors. That way, each processor will take up one thread and perform all the operations in parallel.
The Test
In recent times, choosing a motherboard cannot be completely determined by a Winstone score. Now, many boards come within one Winstone point of each other and therefore the need to benchmark boards against each other falls. Therefore you should not base your decision entirely on the benchmarks you see here, but also on the technical features and advantages of this particular board, seeing as that will probably make the greatest difference in your overall experience
Test Configuration |
|
Processor(s): |
2 x Intel Pentium III 733MHz Retail |
RAM: |
1 x 128MB Mushkin PC133 SDRAM |
Hard Drive(s): |
Western Digital 153BA Ultra ATA 66 7200 RPM |
Bus Master Drivers: |
VIA 4-in-1 v4.29V Service Pack |
Video Card(s): |
NVIDIA GeForce 2 GTS 32MB DDR |
Video Drivers: |
NVIDIA Detonator 6.50 |
Operating System(s): |
Windows 2000 Professional |
Motherboard Revision: |
MSI 694D Pro Revision 1.0 |
BIOS Revision: |
3.2 (1/8/2001) |
BenchmarkApplications: |
Quake
III Arena v1.16n demo001.dm3 |
Windows
2000 Professional Performance
|
|||||
SYSMark 2000 |
Benchmark Studio (OfficeBench 2.0) |
Business Winstone 2001 |
Content Creation Winstone 2001 |
Quake III Arena 640x480x16 |
|
MSI 694D Pro |
162 |
36.72 |
30.5 |
34.3 |
116.5 |
Iwill DVD266-R
|
169
|
34.56
|
31.5
|
36.8
|
124.5
|
Windows
2000 Professional
|
||||||
CliBench Mk III SMP 0.7.10 (CPU) |
Dhrystones |
Whetstones |
Eight Queens |
Matrix |
Number |
Floating Point |
MSI 694D Pro |
2392 |
833 |
3290 |
68131 |
111452 |
11186 |
Iwill DVD266-R
|
2375
|
824
|
3252
|
71909
|
111006
|
11115
|
Windows
2000 Professional
|
||||||||
CliBench Mk III SMP 0.7.10 (Memory and Disk) |
Memory Throughput |
Hard Drive Read |
Hard Drive Write |
CPU Usage (%) |
||||
Max |
Avg. |
Min |
Max |
Avg. |
Min |
|||
MSI 694D Pro |
127931 |
15584 |
12828 |
11302 |
21823 |
19852 |
17747 |
1 |
Iwill DVD266-R
|
173622
|
20480
|
16806
|
14222
|
27379
|
24824
|
20480
|
1
|
Even though the 694D Pro has been in the market for more than six months, it still delivers decent performance figures, although not outstanding. Both SYSMark 2000 and Business and Content Creation Winstone 2001 scores match closely with our other reviews.
Quake III Arena score is interesting, since it is slightly lower than tests we have done on boards using the Apollo Pro133A chipset. During our original coverage of SMP on the Apollo Pro133A, we have discussed the fact that by enabling SMP support in Quake III actually slows down performance in many cases. This may be a video card driver issue or a bug in the game, although this is not clear at the moment.
The advantage of the 694D Pro, being probably the first dual Apollo Pro133A
board, is that we can use it as a reference for our new test benches. Since
this is our first time to use the Benchmark Studio by CSA Research and CliBench
Mk III SMP 0.7.10 tests, it’s hard for us to judge the performance of a board
using figures generated by these two tests. However, from the other performance
figures we obtained on the 694D Pro, it’s safe to take the scores of those tests
as a reference point, and see how the upcoming contenders stack up.
Final Words
There is no doubt that dual processor systems are getting more common. With the help of the integrated SMP support inthe VIA Apollo Pro133A, it can further help to lower the cost and make dual processor systems more affordable.
The MSI 694D Pro is a board that has been on the market for more than six months. Six months is a very long time in the rapidly changing computer market, yet the 694D Pro is still able to provide us with decent features and performance.
The 694D Pro, even at this point, is still providing us with a handful of very useful features, including Firewire and a second IDE controller. It also gives you a lot of overclocking options to push your chips to the limit while being extremely stable. It does have its downside such as the lack of Ultra ATA 100 support by the South Bridge and RAID support.
By judging the pros and cons, the 694D Pro is probably getting a little bit long in the tooth and is not really a best buy anymore. Fortunately, MSI is already a step ahead and has come out with a new successor that we will touch on very soon. For now, we’ll take the 694D Pro as our reference for comparing other dual processor motherboards that we test in the near future.
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