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Intel Core Ultra 7 155U vs Intel Core Ultra 5 134U vs Intel Core Ultra 7 165U

Intel Core Ultra 7 155U

► remove from comparison Intel Ultra 7 155U

The Intel Core Ultra 7 155U is a mid-range Meteor Lake chip that debuted in December 2023. This 1st Gen Core Ultra processor has come to replace 13th generation Core processors; it has 12 cores (2 + 8 + 2) and 14 threads at its disposal. Its Performance cores, of which there are 2, are HT-enabled and run at up to 4.8 GHz while its Efficient cores, of which there are 10 (8 main cores plus 2 extra ones found in the Low Power Island) run at up to 3.8 GHz. The 4-core Intel Arc Graphics, just out of the oven, serves as the integrated graphics adapter - this runs at up to 1.95 GHz - and there is a bevy of other brand-new technologies on offer as well such as the integrated AI Boost NPU with two Gen 3 engines for hardware AI workload acceleration.

Architecture and Features

With Meteor Lake, Intel intends to deliver higher CPU performance, higher GPU performance and at the same time, longer battery life than what Raptor Lake chips were capable of. The company also wants a large piece of the AI cake and is working with Microsoft and other partners to make that happen. As a result, Windows Defender is now AI-enabled, meaning it can use the Intel NPU to take some of the load off the main CPU cores. We also get this new Intel Device Discovery technology that is designed to give us a better hardware-based remote laptop management than ever before; and, to make things even better, Intel now offers a dedicated Arc Pro graphics driver for workstations.

This generation of Intel Core processors features Redwood architecture P-cores and Crestmont architecture E-cores. Both come with slight architectural improvements over Raptor Cove and Gracemont respectively for slightly higher performance-per-clock figures; the interesting thing is that of the 10 E-cores, two are actually a separate cluster located on what Intel calls a "Low Power Island". Essentially, the latter is an SoC within an SoC that can stay active while most other parts of the chip are temporarily switched off to save power. The low-power E-cores run at up to 2.1 GHz. Intel hopes this approach will let it deliver unprecedentedly low power consumption figures when under low load, boosting battery life of laptops and tablets powered by Meteor Lake.

To build its Meteor Lake processors, Intel uses the Foveros technology (stacking several chips on top of each other). This is a cost-cutting measure more than anything else, as manufacturing several small dies on several different processes is so much cheaper than making a huge single die and hoping that there are no defects in it that will require disabling some parts of it.

Elsewhere, the Core Ultra 7 155U comes with 12 MB of L3 cache which is a significant reduction compared to the 24 MB that the 155H, the 165H and the 185H have. The processor has a decent number of PCIe 4 lanes for NVMe SSD speeds up to 7.8 GB/s; it supports RAM running at up to 7467 MHz (DDR5-5600, LPDDR5-7467, LPDDR5x-7467, to be specific - which is about as good as what 8040 series Ryzen chips have). Naturally, the 155U features built-in Thunderbolt 4 support and Intel CNVi Wi-Fi support. It is also worth mentioning that Intel chose to keep native SATA III support that AMD had removed from its Ryzen processors quite a while ago.

The 155U is compatible with 64-bit Windows 10, 64-bit Windows 11 and with many Linux distros.

Performance

While we have no way of knowing what the 155U will be like, as of December 2023, it's safe to expect the chip to be almost as fast as the Core i7-1340P (Raptor Lake, 12 cores, 16 threads, up to 4.6 GHz), as far as multi-thread performance is concerned.

Either way, real-world performance of the chip may vary significantly depending on how high the CPU power limits are and how competent the cooling solution of the system is.

Graphics

The 4-core Arc Graphics runs at up to 1.95 GHz. We expect the iGPU to be about as fast as the aging 96 EU Iris Xe meaning it's good enough for most games, as long as one sticks to 1080p and mostly low quality settings.

A proper DX12 Ultimate graphics adapter, the Arc Graphics is no stranger to ray tracing and other modern technologies including AI frame generation (XeSS). It will let you connect up to four SUHD 4320p monitors and it will both HW-encode and HW-encode the most widely used video codecs including AVC, HEVC and AV1 in a fast and efficient manner.

Your mileage may vary depending on how high the CPU power limits are, how competent the cooling solution of your system is, how fast the RAM of your system is.

Power consumption

This Core Ultra 7 series processor has a Base power consumption of 15 W, with 57 W being its maximum Intel-recommended Turbo power consumption. An active cooling solution is a must for a system powered by this chip.

The 155U is comprised of several small chips ("tiles") that are connected using Intel's Foveros technology. The tile containing main CPU cores is produced on the fairly modern 7 nm Intel process marketed as Intel 4 while most other tiles (the iGPU, the I/O die, ...) are built with TSMC's N5 and N6 processes. The base tile is built with the old Intel 22FFL process.

Intel Core Ultra 5 134U

► remove from comparison Intel Ultra 5 134U

The Intel Core Ultra 5 134U is a lower mid-range Meteor Lake family chip that debuted in December 2023. This 1st Gen Core Ultra processor has come to replace 13th generation Core chips; it has 12 cores (2 + 8 + 2) and 14 threads at its disposal. Its Performance cores, of which there are 2, are HT-enabled and run at up to 4.4 GHz while its Efficient cores, of which there are 10 (8 main cores plus 2 extra ones found in the Low Power Island) run at up to 3.6 GHz. The 4-core Intel Arc Graphics, just out of the oven, serves as the integrated graphics adapter - this runs at up to 1.75 GHz - and there is a bevy of other brand-new technologies on offer as well including the integrated AI Boost NPU with two Gen 3 engines for hardware AI workload acceleration.

Architecture and Features

With Meteor Lake, Intel intends to deliver higher CPU performance, higher GPU performance and at the same time, longer battery life than what Raptor Lake chips were capable of. The company also wants a large piece of the AI cake and is working with Microsoft and other partners to make that happen. As a result, Windows Defender is now AI-enabled, meaning it can use the Intel NPU to take some of the load off the main CPU cores. We also get this new Intel Device Discovery technology that is designed to give us a better hardware-based remote laptop management than ever before; and, to make things even better, Intel now offers a dedicated Arc Pro graphics driver for workstations.

This generation of Intel Core processors features Redwood architecture P-cores and Crestmont architecture E-cores. Both come with slight architectural improvements over Raptor Cove and Gracemont respectively for slightly higher performance-per-clock figures; the interesting thing is that of the 10 E-cores, two are actually a separate cluster located on what Intel calls a "Low Power Island". Essentially, the latter is an SoC within an SoC that can stay active while most other parts of the chip are temporarily switched off to save power. The low-power E-cores run at up to 2.1 GHz. Intel hopes this approach will let it deliver unprecedentedly low power consumption figures when under low load, boosting battery life of laptops and tablets powered by Meteor Lake.

To build its Meteor Lake processors, Intel uses the Foveros technology (stacking several chips on top of each other). This is a cost-cutting measure more than anything else, as manufacturing several small dies on several different processes is so much cheaper than making a huge single die and hoping that there are no defects in it that will require disabling some parts of it.

Elsewhere, the Core Ultra 5 134U comes with 12 MB of L3 cache which is a significant reduction compared to the 24 MB that the 155H, the 165H and the 185H have. The processor has a small number of PCIe 4 and PCIe 3 lanes for NVMe SSD speeds up to 7.8 GB/s; it supports RAM running at up to 6400 MHz (LPDDR5-6400, LPDDR5x-6400, to be specific). vPro Enterprise and business-centric features such as the Remote Platform Erase are onboard as well. Naturally, the 134U also features built-in Thunderbolt 4 support and Intel CNVi Wi-Fi support. It is also worth mentioning that Intel chose to keep native SATA III support that AMD had removed from its Ryzen processors quite a while ago.

The 134U is compatible with 64-bit Windows 10, 64-bit Windows 11 and with many Linux distros.

Performance

While we have no way of knowing what the 134U will be like, as of December 2023, it's safe to expect the chip to be just a few percentage points behind the Core i5-1335U (Raptor Lake, 10 cores, 12 threads, up to 4.6 GHz), as far as multi-thread performance is concerned.

Either way, real-world performance of the chip may vary significantly depending on how high the CPU power limits are and how competent the cooling solution of the system is.

Graphics

The 4-core Arc Graphics runs at up to 1.75 GHz. We expect the iGPU to be a little slower than the aging 96 EU Iris Xe iGPU.

A proper DX12 Ultimate graphics adapter, the Arc Graphics is no stranger to ray tracing and other modern technologies including AI frame generation (XeSS). It will let you connect up to four SUHD 4320p monitors and it will both HW-encode and HW-encode the most widely used video codecs including AVC, HEVC and AV1 in a fast and efficient manner.

Your mileage may vary depending on how high the CPU power limits are, how competent the cooling solution of your system is, how fast the RAM of your system is.

Power consumption

This Core Ultra 5 series processor has a Base power consumption of 9 W, with 30 W being its maximum Intel-recommended Turbo power consumption. An active cooling solution is a must for a system powered by this chip.

The 134U is comprised of several small chips ("tiles") that are connected using Intel's Foveros technology. The tile containing main CPU cores is produced on the fairly modern 7 nm Intel process marketed as Intel 4 while most other tiles (the iGPU, the I/O die, ...) are built with TSMC's N5 and N6 processes. The base tile is built with the old Intel 22FFL process.

Intel Core Ultra 7 165U

► remove from comparison Intel Ultra 7 165U

The Intel Core Ultra 7 165U is an upper mid-range Meteor Lake family chip that debuted in December 2023. This 1st Gen Core Ultra processor has come to replace 13th generation Core processors; it has 12 cores (2 + 8 + 2) and 14 threads at its disposal. Its Performance cores, of which there are 2, are HT-enabled andrun at up to 4.9 GHz while its Efficient cores, of which there are 10 (8 main cores plus 2 extra ones found in the Low Power Island) run at up to 3.8 GHz. The 4-core Intel Arc Graphics, just out of the oven, serves as the integrated graphics adapter - this runs at up to 2.0 GHz - and there is a bevy of other brand-new technologies on offer as well including the integrated AI Boost NPU with two Gen 3 engines for hardware AI workload acceleration.

Architecture and Features

With Meteor Lake, Intel intends to deliver higher CPU performance, higher GPU performance and at the same time, longer battery life than what Raptor Lake chips were capable of. The company also wants a large piece of the AI cake and is working with Microsoft and other partners to make that happen. As a result, Windows Defender is now AI-enabled, meaning it can use the Intel NPU to take some of the load off the main CPU cores. We also get this new Intel Device Discovery technology that is designed to give us a better hardware-based remote laptop management than ever before; and, to make things even better, Intel now offers a dedicated Arc Pro graphics driver for workstations.

This generation of Intel Core processors features Redwood architecture P-cores and Crestmont architecture E-cores. Both come with slight architectural improvements over Raptor Cove and Gracemont respectively for slightly higher performance-per-clock figures; the interesting thing is that of the 10 E-cores, two are actually a separate cluster located on what Intel calls a "Low Power Island". Essentially, the latter is an SoC within an SoC that can stay active while most other parts of the chip are temporarily switched off to save power. The low-power E-cores run at up to 2.1 GHz. Intel hopes this approach will let it deliver unprecedentedly low power consumption figures when under low load, boosting battery life of laptops and tablets powered by Meteor Lake.

To build its Meteor Lake processors, Intel uses the Foveros technology (stacking several chips on top of each other). This is a cost-cutting measure more than anything else, as manufacturing several small dies on several different processes is so much cheaper than making a huge single die and hoping that there are no defects in it that will require disabling some parts of it.

Elsewhere, the Core Ultra 7 165U comes with 12 MB of L3 cache which is a significant reduction compared to the 24 MB that the 155H, the 165H and the 185H have. The processor has a decent number of PCIe 4 lanes for NVMe SSD speeds up to 7.8 GB/s; it supports RAM running at up to 7467 MHz (DDR5-5600, LPDDR5-7467, LPDDR5x-7467, to be specific - which is about as good as what 8040 series Ryzen chips have). vPro Enterprise and business-centric features such as the Remote Platform Erase are onboard as well. Naturally, the 165U also features built-in Thunderbolt 4 support and Intel CNVi Wi-Fi support. It is also worth mentioning that Intel chose to keep native SATA III support that AMD had removed from its Ryzen processors quite a while ago.

The 165U is compatible with 64-bit Windows 10, 64-bit Windows 11 and with many Linux distros.

Performance

While we have no way of knowing what the 165U will be like, as of December 2023, it's safe to expect the chip to be almost as fast as the Core i7-1350P (Raptor Lake, 12 cores, 16 threads, up to 4.7 GHz), as far as multi-thread performance is concerned.

Either way, real-world performance of the chip may vary significantly depending on how high the CPU power limits are and how competent the cooling solution of the system is.

Graphics

The 4-core Arc Graphics runs at up to 2.0 GHz. We expect the iGPU to be about as fast as the aging 96 EU Iris Xe meaning it's good enough for most games at 1080p, provided one is fine with low-to-medium quality settings.

A proper DX12 Ultimate graphics adapter, the Arc Graphics is no stranger to ray tracing and other modern technologies including AI frame generation (XeSS). It will let you connect up to four SUHD 4320p monitors and it will both HW-encode and HW-encode the most widely used video codecs including AVC, HEVC and AV1 in a fast and efficient manner.

Your mileage may vary depending on how high the CPU power limits are, how competent the cooling solution of your system is, how fast the RAM of your system is.

Power consumption

This Core Ultra 7 series processor has a Base power consumption of 15 W, with 57 W being its maximum Intel-recommended Turbo power consumption. An active cooling solution is a must for a system powered by this chip.

The 165U is comprised of several small chips ("tiles") that are connected using Intel's Foveros technology. The tile containing main CPU cores is produced on the fairly modern 7 nm Intel process marketed as Intel 4 while most other tiles (the iGPU, the I/O die, ...) are built with TSMC's N5 and N6 processes. The base tile is built with the old Intel 22FFL process.

ModelIntel Core Ultra 7 155UIntel Core Ultra 5 134UIntel Core Ultra 7 165U
CodenameMeteor Lake-UMeteor Lake-UMeteor Lake-U
SeriesIntel Meteor Lake-UIntel Meteor Lake-UIntel Meteor Lake-U
Series: Meteor Lake-U Meteor Lake-U
Intel Core Ultra 7 165U3.8 - 4.9 GHz12 / 14 cores12 MB L3
Intel Core Ultra 7 155U « 3.8 - 4.8 GHz12 / 14 cores12 MB L3
Intel Core Ultra 7 164U3.8 - 4.8 GHz12 / 14 cores12 MB L3
Intel Core Ultra 5 134U3.6 - 4.4 GHz12 / 14 cores12 MB L3
Intel Core Ultra 7 165U3.8 - 4.9 GHz12 / 14 cores12 MB L3
Intel Core Ultra 7 155U3.8 - 4.8 GHz12 / 14 cores12 MB L3
Intel Core Ultra 7 164U3.8 - 4.8 GHz12 / 14 cores12 MB L3
Intel Core Ultra 5 134U « 3.6 - 4.4 GHz12 / 14 cores12 MB L3
Intel Core Ultra 7 165U « 3.8 - 4.9 GHz12 / 14 cores12 MB L3
Intel Core Ultra 7 155U3.8 - 4.8 GHz12 / 14 cores12 MB L3
Intel Core Ultra 7 164U3.8 - 4.8 GHz12 / 14 cores12 MB L3
Intel Core Ultra 5 134U3.6 - 4.4 GHz12 / 14 cores12 MB L3
Clock3800 - 4800 MHz3600 - 4400 MHz3800 - 4900 MHz
L3 Cache12 MB12 MB12 MB
Cores / Threads12 / 14
2 x 4.8 GHz Intel Redwood Cove P-Core
8 x 3.8 GHz Intel Crestmont E-Core
2 x 2.1 GHz Intel Crestmont E-Core
12 / 14
2 x 4.4 GHz Intel Redwood Cove P-Core
8 x 3.6 GHz Intel Crestmont E-Core
2 x 2.1 GHz Intel Crestmont E-Core
12 / 14
2 x 4.9 GHz Intel Redwood Cove P-Core
8 x 3.8 GHz Intel Crestmont E-Core
2 x 2.1 GHz Intel Crestmont E-Core
TDP15 Watt9 Watt15 Watt
Technology7 nm7 nm7 nm
max. Temp.110 °C110 °C110 °C
SocketBGA2049
FeaturesDDR5-5600/LPDDR5-7467/LPDDR5x-7467 RAM, PCIe 4, Thr. Director, DL Boost, AI Boost, vPro Essen., MMX, SSE, SSE2, SSE3, SSSE3, SSE4.1, SSE4.2, AES, AVX, AVX2, AVX-VNNI, FMA3, SHALPDDR5-6400/LPDDR5x-6400 RAM, PCIe 4, Thr. Director, DL Boost, AI Boost, vPro Enterp., RPE, MMX, SSE, SSE2, SSE3, SSSE3, SSE4.1, SSE4.2, AES, AVX, AVX2, AVX-VNNI, FMA3, SHADDR5-5600/LPDDR5-7467/LPDDR5x-7467 RAM, PCIe 4, Thr. Director, DL Boost, AI Boost, vPro Enterp., RPE, MMX, SSE, SSE2, SSE3, SSSE3, SSE4.1, SSE4.2, AES, AVX, AVX2, AVX-VNNI, FMA3, SHA
iGPUIntel Graphics 4-Core iGPU (Arc) ( - 1950 MHz)Intel Graphics 4-Core iGPU (Arc) ( - 1750 MHz)Intel Graphics 4-Core iGPU (Arc) ( - 2000 MHz)
Architecturex86x86x86
Announced
Manufacturerark.intel.comark.intel.comark.intel.com

Benchmarks

Performance Rating - CB R15 + R20 + 7-Zip + X265 + Blender + 3DM11 CPU - Ultra 7 155U
34.5 pt (57%)
Restrict / Search: Model: Max. age: years
Performance Rating - CB R15 + R20 + 7-Zip + X265 + Blender + 3DM11 CPU - Ultra 5 134U
31.6 pt (53%)
Restrict / Search: Model: Max. age: years
Performance Rating - CB R15 + R20 + 7-Zip + X265 + Blender + 3DM11 CPU - Ultra 7 165U
34.3 pt (57%)
Restrict / Search: Model: Max. age: years
Cinebench 2024 - Cinebench 2024 CPU Single Core
min: 90.3     avg: 96.2     median: 98.5 (55%)     max: 99.9 Points
min: 96     avg: 98     median: 98 (55%)     max: 100 Points
Cinebench 2024 - Cinebench 2024 CPU Multi Core
min: 487     avg: 549     median: 549 (10%)     max: 611 Points
min: 492     avg: 511     median: 510.5 (10%)     max: 529 Points
Cinebench R23 - Cinebench R23 Multi Core
min: 7884     avg: 9470     median: 9385 (9%)     max: 10780 Points
5572 Points (5%)
min: 6760     avg: 9383     median: 10226 (9%)     max: 10797 Points
Cinebench R23 - Cinebench R23 Single Core
min: 1265     avg: 1604     median: 1657 (70%)     max: 1782 Points
1576 Points (67%)
min: 1507     avg: 1633     median: 1662 (71%)     max: 1709 Points
Cinebench R20 - Cinebench R20 CPU (Single Core)
min: 485     avg: 616     median: 635 (70%)     max: 682 Points
603 Points (67%)
min: 604     avg: 629     median: 624 (69%)     max: 661 Points
Cinebench R20 - Cinebench R20 CPU (Multi Core)
min: 3075     avg: 3659     median: 3623 (9%)     max: 4167 Points
2157 Points (5%)
min: 2642     avg: 3630     median: 3934 (10%)     max: 4176 Points
Cinebench R15 - Cinebench R15 CPU Multi 64 Bit
min: 1378     avg: 1559     median: 1537 (10%)     max: 1740 Points
894 Points (6%)
min: 1140     avg: 1500     median: 1605 (10%)     max: 1667 Points
Cinebench R15 - Cinebench R15 CPU Single 64 Bit
min: 230     avg: 239.6     median: 235 (66%)     max: 256 Points
221 Points (62%)
min: 220     avg: 234     median: 231 (65%)     max: 252 Points
7-Zip 18.03 - 7-Zip 18.03 Multi Thread 4 runs
min: 33897     avg: 38012     median: 38344 (22%)     max: 41498 MIPS
21971 MIPS (13%)
min: 28457     avg: 36682     median: 39479 (23%)     max: 43441 MIPS
7-Zip 18.03 - 7-Zip 18.03 Single Thread 4 runs
min: 3666     avg: 4645     median: 4881 (58%)     max: 4920 MIPS
4151 MIPS (49%)
min: 4644     avg: 4840     median: 4852 (57%)     max: 4960 MIPS
HWBOT x265 Benchmark v2.2 - HWBOT x265 4k Preset
min: 8.41     avg: 10.5     median: 10.7 (19%)     max: 12.4 fps
6.5 fps (11%)
min: 7.44     avg: 10.5     median: 11.6 (20%)     max: 12.3 fps
Blender - Blender 3.3 Classroom CPU *
min: 548     avg: 640     median: 632 (8%)     max: 749 Seconds
1156 Seconds (15%)
min: 592     avg: 710     median: 657 (8%)     max: 847 Seconds
Blender - Blender 2.79 BMW27 CPU *
min: 309     avg: 351.8     median: 345 (2%)     max: 410 Seconds
635 Seconds (4%)
min: 310     avg: 368.4     median: 339 (2%)     max: 478 Seconds
R Benchmark 2.5 - R Benchmark 2.5 *
min: 0.4853     avg: 0.6     median: 0.5 (11%)     max: 0.947 sec
0.6 sec (13%)
min: 0.4881     avg: 0.5     median: 0.5 (11%)     max: 0.555 sec
3DMark 11 - 3DM11 Performance Physics
min: 12165     avg: 13752     median: 13841 (34%)     max: 15332 Points
8394 Points (21%)
min: 9825     avg: 13702     median: 14652 (36%)     max: 15069 Points
3DMark - 3DMark Ice Storm Physics
73144 Points (59%)
3DMark - 3DMark Ice Storm Extreme Physics
73319 Points (59%)
3DMark - 3DMark Ice Storm Unlimited Physics
72198 Points (60%)
3DMark - 3DMark Cloud Gate Physics
min: 11846     avg: 12422     median: 12460 (32%)     max: 12960 Points
7162 Points (18%)
min: 8546     avg: 11761     median: 12523.5 (32%)     max: 13450 Points
3DMark - 3DMark Fire Strike Standard Physics
min: 17833     avg: 19443     median: 19753 (35%)     max: 21085 Points
9205 Points (16%)
min: 12585     avg: 17706     median: 19519 (35%)     max: 20733 Points
3DMark - 3DMark Time Spy CPU
min: 5579     avg: 6431     median: 6323 (27%)     max: 7373 Points
3448 Points (15%)
min: 4354     avg: 6194     median: 6581 (28%)     max: 7250 Points
Geekbench 6.4 - Geekbench 6.4 Single-Core
min: 1534     avg: 2171     median: 2309 (58%)     max: 2382 Points
2092 Points (52%)
min: 1853     avg: 2204     median: 2282.5 (57%)     max: 2359 Points
Geekbench 6.4 - Geekbench 6.4 Multi-Core
min: 7592     avg: 8906     median: 9202 (36%)     max: 9829 Points
8834 Points (34%)
min: 5205     avg: 8703     median: 9441 (37%)     max: 9944 Points
Geekbench 5.5 - Geekbench 5.1 - 5.5 64 Bit Single-Core
min: 891     avg: 1538     median: 1691 (66%)     max: 1717 Points
1560 Points (61%)
min: 1663     avg: 1717     median: 1732 (68%)     max: 1740 Points
Geekbench 5.5 - Geekbench 5.1 - 5.5 64 Bit Multi-Core
min: 6989     avg: 7983     median: 8270 (15%)     max: 8805 Points
7569 Points (14%)
min: 5652     avg: 7911     median: 8564 (15%)     max: 8719 Points
Mozilla Kraken 1.1 - Kraken 1.1 Total Score *
min: 525     avg: 550     median: 548 (1%)     max: 581 ms
576 ms (1%)
min: 406.8     avg: 516     median: 541 (1%)     max: 562 ms
Octane V2 - Octane V2 Total Score
90596 Points (70%)
WebXPRT 4 - WebXPRT 4 Score
min: 244     avg: 248     median: 248 (68%)     max: 253 Points
91.2 Points (25%)
min: 242     avg: 259.2     median: 244 (67%)     max: 314 Points
WebXPRT 3 - WebXPRT 3 Score
min: 136.4     avg: 246.7     median: 272 (49%)     max: 286 Points
250 Points (45%)
min: 261     avg: 296     median: 276 (50%)     max: 399 Points
CrossMark - CrossMark Overall
min: 1393     avg: 1483     median: 1467 (55%)     max: 1566 Points
1415 Points (53%)
min: 1454     avg: 1510     median: 1516 (57%)     max: 1570 Points
Power Consumption - Prime95 Power Consumption - external Monitor *
min: 37.9     avg: 47.7     median: 47.6 (8%)     max: 57.7 Watt
37 Watt (6%)
min: 45.5     avg: 49.7     median: 48.7 (8%)     max: 56.1 Watt
Power Consumption - Cinebench R15 Multi Power Consumption - external Monitor *
min: 51.5     avg: 60.1     median: 60.1 (11%)     max: 68.6 Watt
48.4 Watt (9%)
min: 30.9     avg: 50.6     median: 57.7 (11%)     max: 63.2 Watt
Power Consumption - Idle Power Consumption - external Monitor *
min: 4.25     avg: 5.3     median: 5.4 (4%)     max: 6.42 Watt
5.6 Watt (4%)
min: 3.54     avg: 4.8     median: 5 (3%)     max: 5.7 Watt
Power Consumption - Idle Power Consumption 150cd 1min *
min: 4.85     avg: 6.3     median: 6.3 (7%)     max: 7.59 Watt
6 Watt (7%)
min: 4.04     avg: 6.1     median: 5.5 (6%)     max: 9.24 Watt
Power Consumption - Power Efficiency - Cinebench R15 Multi external Monitor
29.8 Points per Watt (22%)
18.5 Points per Watt (14%)
min: 24.7     avg: 34.9     median: 26.4 (20%)     max: 53.7 Points per Watt

Average Benchmarks Intel Core Ultra 7 155U → 100% n=24

Average Benchmarks Intel Core Ultra 5 134U → 74% n=24

Average Benchmarks Intel Core Ultra 7 165U → 102% n=24

- Range of benchmark values for this graphics card
red legend - Average benchmark values for this graphics card
* Smaller numbers mean a higher performance
1 This benchmark is not used for the average calculation

v1.33
log 12. 03:45:54

#0 ran 0s before starting gpusingle class +0s ... 0s

#1 checking url part for id 16915 +0s ... 0s

#2 checking url part for id 16925 +0s ... 0s

#3 checking url part for id 16913 +0s ... 0s

#4 not redirecting to Ajax server +0s ... 0s

#5 did not recreate cache, as it is less than 5 days old! Created at Sun, 11 May 2025 10:22:38 +0200 +0s ... 0s

#6 composed specs +0.006s ... 0.006s

#7 did output specs +0s ... 0.006s

#8 getting avg benchmarks for device 16915 +0.004s ... 0.01s

#9 got single benchmarks 16915 +0.01s ... 0.02s

#10 getting avg benchmarks for device 16925 +0.003s ... 0.024s

#11 got single benchmarks 16925 +0.003s ... 0.027s

#12 getting avg benchmarks for device 16913 +0.003s ... 0.03s

#13 got single benchmarks 16913 +0.007s ... 0.037s

#14 got avg benchmarks for devices +0s ... 0.037s

#15 min, max, avg, median took s +0.038s ... 0.075s

#16 return log +0s ... 0.075s

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Redaktion, 2017-09- 8 (Update: 2023-07- 1)