Couple of SuperPi Questions

Soldato
Joined
11 Jun 2004
Posts
4,222
Location
Middlesex, London
Hi all,

Sorry - I'm a newbie to SuperPi...

Could somebody just advise what calculation everyone does? i.e. 1M or 32Mb etc..? and do you need to run two instances for dual core rigs..?

Thanks
 
1m is the norm.
i get about 14 secs ( i think) on my 6600 @ 3.2
and only one run at a time is the norm.

Jobe
 
To fully test your cpu then you should run two versions (Super PI should only really be used to test for VERY basic stability). It appears however thay most only do 1 core/1 meg run. Imo that is a benchmark and by no means a test of stability.
 
w3bbo said:
To fully test your cpu then you should run two versions (Super PI should only really be used to test for VERY basic stability). It appears however thay most only do 1 core/1 meg run. Imo that is a benchmark and by no means a test of stability.

the test is supposed to be a benchmark :rolleyes: :D :p

1m = time it takes to calculate pi to 1 million decimal places, 32m = 32 million etc :)
 
Yes... I feel stupid for building a near silent, heavily OCed, dual core system with 2gb of ram for around £350 months before C2D came out when I wanted/needed it. :)
 
w3bbo said:
To fully test your cpu then you should run two versions (Super PI should only really be used to test for VERY basic stability). It appears however thay most only do 1 core/1 meg run. Imo that is a benchmark and by no means a test of stability.

Hmmm, well when my CPU was not stable I ran the SUPERPI 32m test and when my CPU was not stable it would come up: "NOT CONVERGENT IN SQ" or something like that!
 
SuperPi is not a good benchmark as it's very memory speed dependent. My E6600 at 3.1GHz does 16s with the RAM at 667 5-5-5-15 or 15.5s with the same RAM at 667 4-4-4-12. If I turn the RAM up to 800 at 5-5-5-15 it does it in 14.6s.
 
Hamoodii said:
Hmmm, well when my CPU was not stable I ran the SUPERPI 32m test and when my CPU was not stable it would come up: "NOT CONVERGENT IN SQ" or something like that!

yeah your overclock has to be very flakey to do that.... usually though you can pass 32mb of pi and fail prime after an hour or two, hence super pi should be only used as a method of pimping your pc :D

i had sub 25s OVER a year ago too ;)
 
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