Rockchip RK3566 Benchmarks in Android 11 (Zidoo M6)

I received Zidoo M6 last month, a mini PC based on Rockchip RK3566 quad-core Cortex-A55 processor. I initially understood it came with Ubuntu Linux, but actually, it came pre-loaded with Android 11, so I’ve decided to run some benchmarks on the RK3566 device to see how it performs compared to other Arm systems

Zidoo M6 system info

But before running benchmarks, let’s have a look at some system info with CPU-Z

Zidoo M6 CPU-Z

CPU-Z has never heard about RK3566, so it detects it as RK3066, but the rest of the information seems correct with a quad-core Cortex-A55 clocked between 400 MHz and 1.8 GHz, an Arm Mali-G52 GPU, 3775KB RAM, and 24.12 GB internal storage from the 32GB flash. The system runs Android 11 on top of Linux 4.19 which will be supported until December 2024. I can set the video output to 4K, but the UI is still limited to 1920×1080 as expected for this type of system. The temperature reported in CPU-Z is meaningless with a room temperature of about 28 to 30°C. Root access is set to “no”, but I had no problem get root access through adb when I registered the device to get rid of the Play Protect error message.

Rockchip RK3566 Benchmarks

Historically, I’ve been using three benchmarks in Android TV boxes: Antutu, Vellamo, and 3Dmark. But Vellamo has been deprecated for a few years now, Antutu has been removed from the Google Play store, and 3DMark will refuse to run on the device. So I had to find alternatives starting with Geekbench 5.0.

GeekBench 5

You’ll find the detailed results on the Geekbench website. It’s interesting to compare it to the Amlogic S905X4 quad-core Cortex-A55 processor, and the results are similar except for some exceptions such as the navigation score that is 1.76 times (single core) and 2.54 times (multi-threaded) faster on the Amlogic processor.

Amlogic S905X4 vs Rockchip RK3566

GeekBench explains the Navigation workload as follows:

The Navigation workload computes driving directions between a sequence of destinations using Dijkstra’s algorithm. Similar techniques are used to compute paths in games, to route computer network traffic, and to route driving directions. The dataset contains 216,548 nodes and 450,277 edges with weights approximating travel time along the road represented by the edge. The route includes 13 destinations. The dataset is based on Open Street Map data for Ontario, Canada.

It’s unclear what causes the significant difference. One might think it could be related to memory bandwidth with a large dataset, but Zidoo M6 comes with LPDDR4.

I could not install PCMark and 3DMark, but was unable to run any benchmarks as clicking on the Run button did not trigger any actions. I contact UL who told me to manually install the APL and DLC “workload” files, but the result was the same. So instead, I went with Passmark PerformanceTest Mobile for Android.

Passmark PerformanceTest Android 11I ran the test twice with 1805 points the first time, and 1850 points the second time which puts it right at the level of a Samsung Galaxy Tab A 10.5-inch with a Qualcomm Snapdragon 450 octa-core Cortex A53 processor @ 1.8GHz.

I finally decided to sideload Antutu since I did not have that much data to play with. Antutu 9.0 Beta is the version currently available on the website.

Antutu Play ProtectThe reason the app was kicked from the Play store is probably related to privacy, as we are warned the app can collect data that could be used for tracking purposes. I could install the app, but it would keep on trying to download the Antutu 3DBench from the Play store, even though I sideloaded it already so I was unable to run Antutu benchmark on Zidoo M6.

Zidoo told me they could run Antutu 6.0.2, so I installed the apks for the main benchmark and 3D benchmark and could get some results.

RK3566 Antutu 6 resultsThis Antutu version is fairly old, so the link associated with the QR code does not work. But that’s not a problem as I’ve got Antutu 6 numbers for S905X, RK3328, and H6 which can provide a comparison base. Android has been optimized over the years, and newer versions may yield a slightly higher benchmarks score, but it still give an idea. Allwinner H6 is a quad-core Cortex-A53 clocked at up to 1.8 GHz got 40,467 points in the same Antutu 6 benchmark, meaning Rockchip RK3566 overall score is about 50% higher. Looking into details, we can see the CPU score is roughly equivalent (16,380 vs 16,395), but the Mali-G52 really shines in comparison, getting 11132 points against 6,292 points (H6 with Mali-720 GPU) in the 3D benchmark. The UX score is also much higher (28721 vs 13,360), while the RAM score is quite marginally higher for RK3566 (4747 vs 4,420).

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3 Comments
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David Willmore
David Willmore
3 years ago

Good review, thank you.

Sander
Sander
3 years ago

Wow, that is a lot of software that you can’t install or use

Boardcon Rockchip and Allwinner SoM and SBC products