The refurbished Galaxy Note7 – be it the Note7R or Note FE – has left footprints in the Geekbench fields. A good tracker will easily tell that the beast has an Exynos 8890 heart, but is it beating at full strength?

The benchmark detected a clock frequency of 1.6GHz – matching the speed of the power-efficient cluster of the original. Unfortunately, it did not detect the clockspeed of the more capable cluster. RAM remains unchanged at 4GB, as expected.

Here is how the processor stacks up against some recent high-end offerings.

GeekBench 4.1 (multi-core)

Higher is better

Galaxy S8+ (E8895)

6754

Xiaomi Mi 6 (S835)

6719

HTC U11 (S835)

6393

Galaxy S8+ (S835)

6301

Galaxy Note FE (E8890)

6092

Oppo R11 (S660)

5777

Xperia XZ Premium (S835)

5460

GeekBench 4.1 (single-core)

Higher is better

Galaxy S8+ (E8895)

1986

Galaxy Note FE (E8890)

1957

Xiaomi Mi 6 (S835)

1929

HTC U11 (S835)

1919

Xperia XZ Premium (S835)

1836

Galaxy S8+ (S835)

1832

Oppo R11 (S660)

1596

The scores are surprisingly solid – close to the Exynos 8895 chipset inside the Galaxy S8 pair and close to the Snapdragon 835 as well. The chipset seems to have aged very well, it seems that the smaller battery capacity did not lead Samsung to downclock the chipset to save power.

The most recent benchmark for the SM-N935S is significantly lower (in the 1,000/4,000 range). It’s a one-off result, so we’re going to ignore it. Note that this is Geekbench 4.1, previous versions (v4.0 and especially v3.0) are not comparable.

Source