AMD Ryzen 5 1600X Overclocked Benchmark Results At 4.1GHz
Media Encoding Benchmarks
HandBrake v1.0.1 – link
HandBrake is an open-source, GPL-licensed, multiplatform, multithreaded video transcoder, available for MacOS X, Linux and Windows. It is popular today as it allows you to transcode multiple input video formats to h.264 output format and is highly multithreaded. We used Big Buck Bunny as our input file, which has become one of the world standards for video benchmarks. For our benchmark scenario we used a standard 2D 4K (3840×2160) 60 FPS clip in the MP4 format and used Handbrake version 1.0.1 to do two things.
We used the new Fast 1080p30 preset to shrink that down to a 1920 x 1080 video clip to reduce the file size. This is something people often do to save space to put movies onto mobile devices.
We also ran the workload using the normal preset as it puts the CPU at a higher load than the Fast 1080p30 preset.
X264 HD Encoding – link
the x264 HD Benchmark is a reproducible measure of how fast your machine can encode a short HD-quality video clip into a high quality x264 video file. Its nice because everyone running it will use the same video clip and software. The video encoder (x264.exe) reports a fairly accurate internal benchmark (in frames per second) for each pass of the video encode and it also uses multi-core processors very efficiently. All these factors make this an ideal benchmark to compare different processors and systems to each other. We are using x264 HD v5.0.1 for this test.
Media Encoding Benchmark Results Summary: The AMD Ryzen 5 1600X overclock gave us ab 8% performance boost in Handbrake 1080p Fast and we were nearly as fast as a stock AMD Ryzen 7 1700X processor in that tough encoding test. In the X264 benchmark we were just 2.8 FPS behind the Ryzen 7 1700X processor on the second pass and an impressive 5 FPS faster than an Intel Core i7-7700K overclocked to 5.1 GHz. Those 2 extra physical cores really do help in some benchmarks!