96Firebird
Diamond Member
Lets benchmark all cards at their stock clocks without boost.
Problem solved.
Problem solved.
Lets benchmark all cards at their stock clocks without boost.
Problem solved.
Lets benchmark all cards at their stock clocks without boost.
Problem solved.
Mine requires 64-70% fan to maintain stock boost levels @ 70-72 F ambient.
They obviously lied insanely hard.
Samsung and HTC also got delisted not long ago due to...boost.
It wasn't because of boost per se, it was because they had a boost feature enabled to work on only a small whitelist of benchmark apps. This is considered cheating and rightly so, since the performance seen under these circumstances won't reflect actual performance in any real-world application. If they had implemented boost the way the GPU vendors do (based on TDP and thermals) there would be no problem.
Then they could still cheat in press samples 😉
The main problem is, the bigger base/boost delta, the bigger area you open for either variance or/and cheat. And we know that companies do exploit this.
Cherry picked press cards with a better performing custom BIOS. A BIOS never intended for use in retail cards. I'm not sure how that isn't cheating.
There is still as of yet no acceptable explanation of this. AMD stated they "can't replicate the problem" even though the press BIOS caused retail cards to crash, and the press BIOS used lower voltages/higher clockspeeds.
Any links to all these retail cards crashing when flashed with press bios?
I've only seen TR's
Legit reviews card didn't crash when flashed with press bios.
Retail cards probably run overall higher voltage than press cards cause there is probably more variation in chip quality with retail samples so they have higher voltage so that all cards are stable without having to bin every single chip that comes out of the fab.
Legit reviews card didn't crash when flashed with press bios.
Retail cards probably run overall higher voltage than press cards cause there is probably more variation in chip quality with retail samples so they have higher voltage so that all cards are stable without having to bin every single chip that comes out of the fab.
I'd have the same position if NVidia did the same thing. I don't want to be buying a product under false pretenses. No matter how small a variance it may be.
To conclude:
- Kepler gpus throttle as bad as 290s after warmup.
Kepler GPU's, on the other hand, are GUARANTEED to hit their advertised base clock operating speeds.
That's great. Where can I find reviews of Kepler GPUs running at their guaranteed advertised base clock rate? Everything I've seen has them running at their max variable boost clock speed, just like AMD cards.
just look at any Kepler specs on any website, rather that be amazon, newegg, techpowerup, anandtech or wherever. it will bluntly tell you the guaranteed base clock.
for example. 680 is guaranteed at 1006MHz. will oc to 1150MHz. if you really lucky with the silicon lottery, then to 1225MHz.
any gpu that does not meet that guarantee base clock simply gets a rma as defective.
any more questions?
Case in point:
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