RECOIL 16'' 2024 - PERFORMANCE TESTS & BENCHMARKS

magicdog

Member
Hi, id be very interested on any feedback concerning the RECOIL 2024 model with an rtx 4090. What is the performance like and how are the benchmark tests specifically cinebench 2023?
Earlier in the year XMG with GizmoSlipTech showed they're version of the unit reaching scores of over 35000 (multicore rendering) in cinebench 2023.
 

Paul1964

Member
Especially when you take water-cooling into account. It increases the thermal headroom of the CPU and GPU. The ODM (Original Device Manufacturer) changed the design of the water-cooling loop within the 2024 16" laptop to improve heat dissipation.

Yeah, there are many sellers of these laptops around the work, each putting their own spin on them but it's more of a regional thing.

In the EU you have Medion and XMG. In the US it's CyberPower and Eluktronics, in the UK it's PC Specialist.

I've found PC Specialist to be a very good company, going above and beyond with their after-sales service.
 

magicdog

Member
Thats great to hear. Ive been impressed talking to them so far. My Recoil 16 has turned up today ( The Eluktronics video completely convinced me ) so Im hoping for good things especially faster rendering times.
 

GulApa

Member
If you're gonna use it with the water cooler, you can expect a 25% multicore performance increase. If not, depending on the unit, you might see a 5-10% improvement. 14th gen laptops have less variance between units due to better manufacturing. IMO, you should go for the 2024 version for build quality and convenience reasons, not performance. 2024 version has an all-metal build, brighter screen with much better screen/body ratio, a better touchpad, better keyboard layout, usb-c charging, one hand opening and stuff like that. These might make it worth it or not depending on your preference, but I wouldn't say performance increase is enough to warrant the 2024 version.
 

magicdog

Member
If you're gonna use it with the water cooler, you can expect a 25% multicore performance increase. If not, depending on the unit, you might see a 5-10% improvement. 14th gen laptops have less variance between units due to better manufacturing. IMO, you should go for the 2024 version for build quality and convenience reasons, not performance. 2024 version has an all-metal build, brighter screen with much better screen/body ratio, a better touchpad, better keyboard layout, usb-c charging, one hand opening and stuff like that. These might make it worth it or not depending on your preference, but I wouldn't say performance increase is enough to warrant the 2024 version.
But the 2024 version has just smashed the msi titan 18 in cinebench 2023. 37000 on a 10 min run is maybe the best ever score. So in as far as rendering performance for a 3d visualiser thats a stunning improvement on the 2023 model. I take all the points you have mentioned. Plus I bought it so I cant wait to use it.
 

Paul1964

Member
But the 2024 version has just smashed the msi titan 18 in cinebench 2023. 37000 on a 10 min run is maybe the best ever score. So in as far as rendering performance for a 3d visualiser thats a stunning improvement on the 2023 model. I take all the points you have mentioned. Plus I bought it so I cant wait to use it.
37000? That's awesome!
 

SpyderTracks

We love you Ukraine
If anyone is interested, Eluktronics sell there version of the recoil 16 2024 (HYDROC 16) in the U.S. and they tested it against the MSI titan 18.

Other than some provisional testing of the xmg neo 16 at CES, this is the first real look at what the laptop can do. Just to say it outperformed the Titan considerably. The benchmarks were pretty impressive.

Here is the link:

Please be aware, how one SI configures the chassis compared to PCS is completely irrelevant.

I think people don't understand how the custom laptop market works.

There are pretty much only 2 barebones manufacturers left, Clevo and TongFang. They make the barebones chassis which is simply the chassis itself, the motherboard and the GPU embedded

Then there are SI's (System Integrators). PCS are an SI, there are SI's all over the world. Every SI will complete the build with their own components such as screens, drives, RAM, wifi cards etc etc.

Each SI is supplied with a standard BIOS by the manufacturer (clevo / TongFang). Some will further customise it, but most don't.

There seems to be a lot of misunderstanding and people are expecting one SI's product to be exactly the same as another, that's just not how it works, it's impossible for that to be the case.
 

Paul1964

Member
Please be aware, how one SI configures the chassis compared to PCS is completely irrelevant.

I think people don't understand how the custom laptop market works.

There are pretty much only 2 barebones manufacturers left, Clevo and TongFang. They make the barebones chassis which is simply the chassis itself, the motherboard and the GPU embedded

Then there are SI's (System Integrators). PCS are an SI, there are SI's all over the world. Every SI will complete the build with their own components such as screens, drives, RAM, wifi cards etc etc.

Each SI is supplied with a standard BIOS by the manufacturer (clevo / TongFang). Some will further customise it, but most don't.

There seems to be a lot of misunderstanding and people are expecting one SI's product to be exactly the same as another, that's just not how it works, it's impossible for that to be the case.
While they do build with different options such as RAM and storage, the performance should be fairly comparable between the different SIs using these chassis. Even the BIOSs are interchangeable. I run the XMG BIOS on my PCS Recoil 17 as it allows for a bit more configuration than the PCS version. It all runs beautifully.
 

SpyderTracks

We love you Ukraine
While they do build with different options such as RAM and storage, the performance should be fairly comparable between the different SIs using these chassis. Even the BIOSs are interchangeable. I run the XMG BIOS on my PCS Recoil 17 as it allows for a bit more configuration than the PCS version. It all runs beautifully.
Did you get PCS approval to do so though? As if not you’ve voided your warranty unfortunately.

Again, because components are different, another SI BIOS can very easily brick a PCS laptop if it's paired with incompatible components.

And as per the terms, if you flash a BIOS without PCS approval, you void warranty. Also on a custom laptop, flashing a BIOS is far more low level than people may be used to and bricking is far more common as there are specific steps that need to be taken. This is exactly why you need to ask PCS first so if a brick does occur following their guidance you’re fully covered by warranty and they’d just replace the system.

The PCS version has an entirely different MUX and display setup, so you’d never get the same experience as some other SIs. But again, this is very much reflected in the price also.

We’ve had it in the past where flashing a 3rd party BIOS has led to requiring a completely clean install of the OS and all data is lost, that’s really common. Screen failures are also very common with 3rd party BIOS as they're pushing completely the wrong voltage to the screen as the other SI uses a completely different panel.
 

Paul1964

Member
Did you get PCS approval to do so though? As if not you’ve voided your warranty unfortunately.

Again, because components are different, another SI BIOS can very easily brick a PCS laptop if it's paired with incompatible components.

And as per the terms, if you flash a BIOS without PCS approval, you void warranty. Also on a custom laptop, flashing a BIOS is far more low level than people may be used to and bricking is far more common as there are specific steps that need to be taken. This is exactly why you need to ask PCS first so if a brick does occur following their guidance you’re fully covered by warranty and they’d just replace the system.

The PCS version has an entirely different MUX and display setup, so you’d never get the same experience as some other SIs. But again, this is very much reflected in the price also.

We’ve had it in the past where flashing a 3rd party BIOS has led to requiring a completely clean install of the OS and all data is lost, that’s really common. Screen failures are also very common with 3rd party BIOS as they're pushing completely the wrong voltage to the screen as the other SI uses a completely different panel.
I remember a PCS employee posting in another thread that the XMG BIOS would work. Otherwise I wouldn't have risked it. But yes, it's very good to be cautious and don't try it if you don't know what you are doing and are prepared to accept the potential risks.
 

Paul1964

Member
Found it.


This thread started by PCS says that XMG have a few more options in their version of the BIOS such as the undervolting of the CPU - which is why I run that BIOS. I have a 150mv undervolt which lets the CPU run a little cooler for the same performance.

They even suggested using it until they'd fixed (or had fixed by TongFang) some issues with their version.

But yes, the caveat still stands, proceed with extreme caution.
 

SpyderTracks

We love you Ukraine
I remember a PCS employee posting in another thread that the XMG BIOS would work. Otherwise I wouldn't have risked it. But yes, it's very good to be cautious and don't try it if you don't know what you are doing and are prepared to accept the potential risks.
That was for that particular issue and only until the PCS BIOS fix was available, but you still had to contact them to get approval first. Did you get their approval? If not then you've voided any warranty.

ESPECIALLY with a laptop, warranty is paramount, as if you get a GPU failure for instance, it's the whole motherboard that has to be replaced as it's part of the motherboard these days, not modular, and this can be very near the cost of a new laptop.

For anyone else reading, on a PC or laptop, you void your warranty if you don't flash with PCS approval. They verify BIOSes for stability, so they will dictate which one they've verified for use with your specific build.
 
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