Science Mark 2.0
is an attempt to put the truth behind benchmarking. In an attempt to
model real world demands and performance, SM2 is a suite of
high-performance benchmarks that realistically stress system
performance without architectural bias. Science Mark 2.0 is
comprised of 7 benchmarks, each of which measures a different aspect of real world system performance.

At ScienceMark 2 benchmark, the OCZ DDR3-1600 had very high performance in all memory timings.
SuperPI
has become an utility to benchmark modern systems. In August 1995, the
calculation of pi up to 4,294,960,000 decimal digits was succeeded by
using a supercomputer at the University of Tokyo. The program was
written by D.Takahashi and he collaborated with Dr. Y.Kanada at the
computer center, the University of Tokyo.

This record-breaking program was ported to personal computer
environment such as Windows NT and Windows 95 and called Super PI. The
software offers up to 32M calculations of PI numbers, for all memory
settings we tested only the 2M calculations.

With SuperPI 2M calculation time, the OCZ DDR3-1600 again performed very good.