exar333
Diamond Member
- Feb 7, 2004
- 8,518
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You aren't reading the chart right.
Edit: Neither is Don. It's 112 watts difference.
Pretty sure 485 is > 473. Math issues on your end?
You aren't reading the chart right.
Edit: Neither is Don. It's 112 watts difference.
I couldn't agree with Ryan more -- again:
I don't see what's so fantastic about this situation. AMD's high-end needs the same power like the gtx480. There is no room left for more performance. And yet they can't really beat nVidia's GK104 card which is their second best card at the end of the year.
And if this would not be bad enough they can't build a proper x2 card because Tahiti is to big and to power hungry.
AMD got fooled by nVidia.
I don't see what's so fantastic about this situation. AMD's high-end needs the same power like the gtx480. There is no room left for more performance. And yet they can't really beat nVidia's GK104 card which is their second best card at the end of the year.
And if this would not be bad enough they can't build a proper x2 card because Tahiti is to big and to power hungry.
AMD got fooled by nVidia.
were finally seeing something that we havent seen for a very long time: bona fide, cut throat, brutal competition in the high-end video card segment for the fastest single-GPU video card. To call it refreshing is an understatement; its nothing short of fantastic. For the first time in 6 years AMD is truly performance competitive with NVIDIA at the high-end and we couldn't be happier.
I don't see what's so fantastic about this situation. AMD's high-end needs the same power like the gtx480. There is no room left for more performance. And yet they can't really beat nVidia's GK104 card which is their second best card at the end of the year.
And if this would not be bad enough they can't build a proper x2 card because Tahiti is to big and to power hungry.
AMD got fooled by nVidia.
The standard 7970 does a better job as power use is very close between it and the 680 and performence is about 10% in favour of the 680. So I guess it doesn't matter in that case? The 480 used nearly double the power of the 5870 and used more power than the 5970.
I don't think power use is this cards biggest enemy, although I think the GPU boost feature adding voltage is what puts it so far ahead of the standard 7970 in power use. I wonder if you can disable the GPU boost. The biggest problem I have is the reference cooler. WTF? They had 6 months to produce a better one. Well maybe we won't see any referece 7970GE's but still.
Another thing is it looks like the GPU boost on the 7970 is more sophisticated than on the 680 and faster. Them switching from a monthly driver schedule also seems to have helped. I'd like to see what they can do with GPU boost with a GPU built around it.
And yet they can't really beat nVidia's GK104 card which is their second best card at the end of the year.
480 went above 300W
7970 GHz goes to 220-230W...
GK104 is Nvidia BEST card... and yes it does beat it by close to 10% on high resolutions. (by the end of the year you MIGHT see another videocard of Nvidia on the PROFESSIONAL MARKET)
Tahiti is small... its about the same size as 6970...
The power consumption is in line with the 6970.
Yes, it's their best card. But in the end it's their mid-range card, look at g92. The bigger version is coming and it will be ~50% faster while using the same power as their old high-end and AMD's 7970-GHz.
Quote the last paragraph of that same article, same page troll.
EDIT: I'll do it for you, since I know you won't.
AMD's HD 7970 GHz edition is priced at $499, the same as NVIDIA's GTX 680. While this might seem enticing at first glance, since the GHz Edition is faster, NVIDIA's card wins at power-draw, noise, and manual overclocking, with the better card overall. I find $499 is just too high to really draw away much attention from the GTX 680, if the HD 7970 GHz Edition was $450 I'd definitely consider it, until that happens I'll happily take a GTX 680, or even GTX 670, which offers better price/performance at not much lower performance.
Because high end gamers really care about how much power their video card(s) use...
I still can't get over how this card eats 168 more watts then a 670
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Ryan Smith said:Because of chip-to-chip variation, the load voltage of 7970 cards varies with the chip and how leaky it is. Short of a large sample size theres no way to tell what the voltage of an average 7970 or 7970GE is, so we can only look at what we have.
Now not all of this is due to the GPU a certain percentage is the CPU getting to sleep less often because it needs to prepare more frames for the faster GPU but in practice most of the difference is consumed (and exhausted) by the GPU.
Techreport said:We like to test power draw under load by running a real game rather than a synthetic worst-case, power-hog application. This time around, we chose Arkham City to generate that load. Turns out that game induces higher power draw than Skyrim, which we've used in the past, or Max Payne 3.
Interesting. These results are pretty different from what we saw when we used Skyrim to generate the load. Really didn't expect to see the stock 7970 drawing less power than the GeForce GTX 680. We may have to use multiple games next time around, if time permits.
Custom cooled GTX 670's, like ASUS DC II and Gigabyte Windforce 3x are the clear winners in my opinion. I find no other high-end graphics card to be interesting. Except maybe a GTX 690 instead of 2x GTX 670 in SLI. GTX 680 is pointless when compared to GTX 670 the way I see it.
And this AMD/ATI cards looks like trash compared to Nvidia's offerings. I cannot find one good reason to buy a 7970 over a GTX 670 or GTX 680.
The custom-cooled 7970s are a good buy too, and cheaper (MUCH more quiet too) vs. the almost dust buster 7970GE ref card. Who would buy this loud reference card for more $$$?
Yes, it's their best card. But in the end it's their mid-range card, look at g92. The bigger version is coming and it will be ~50% faster while using the same power as their old high-end and AMD's 7970-GHz.
One may expect to see AIB differentiation on 7970 Ghz editions as well.
Yes, it's their best card. But in the end it's their mid-range card, look at g92. The bigger version is coming and it will be ~50% faster while using the same power as their old high-end and AMD's 7970-GHz.
So you can buy the same exact card you get now, but for more $$$? Show me that the new models get more headroom, run cooler, or some other advantage before this makes sense. I still say get an existing custom PCB, overclock, and be done with it. There is no other AMD card over $300 that makes sense to buy other than a custom 7970. Period.
