I'm surprised the 3080 Ti is performing so poorly at 170W, I would expect much better performance.He tests the 3060TI and 3080TI against the 3060, all locked to the 3060's default power limit of 170W. 3060Ti comes out slightly ahead with the 3080TI matching the 3060TI.
Yep, that's basically why I started this thread. I had assumed more execution units at lower clocks would be more efficient, but that's obviously not always the case.I'm surprised the 3080 Ti is performing so poorly at 170W, I would expect much better performance.
The problem with undervolting is the same as with overclocking. You're taking a risk with stability because you never know which situation around the corner will cause a game crash. And when it does randomly crash, you won't know if it's your voltage or something else.Using a hand tuned voltage curve and capping the voltage to 0.713 V will make any RTX 3000 card sip power below 1.6 GHz.
I am pretty sure most if not all RTX 3000 cards can do 1.45-1.50 GHz at 0.713 V stable no problem. But MSI Afterburner can do a few hundred MHz below that in case it isn’t.The problem with undervolting is the same as with overclocking. You're taking a risk with stability because you never know which situation around the corner will cause a game crash. And when it does randomly crash, you won't know if it's your voltage or something else.
A lowered powercap is 100% stable and doesn't need testing.
Similar to the sweet spot for my 6800XT on stock voltage curve. Literally just set max frequency slider in Adrenaline to 90% and it does 160-170W @ <949mV, frequency 2100-2200MHz with minimal performance loss and less than 60% of the power draw. I do not undervolt as I have zero tolerance for instability.It is a bit more complicated when you don't have full control of vcore. I did these test on my 6800XT. For me it would be interesting to see how a regular 6800 would perform in the same power envelopes. (Borderlands 3 Ultra @ 5120x1440)
@200W avg. FPS 66.52 (actual GPU voltage ~950mV, max frequency 2300Mhz, Voltage 1050 mV)
@240W + 20% avg FPS 69.51 +4,5% (actual GPU voltage ~1015mV, max frequency 2400Mhz, Voltage 1050 mV)
@280W + 40% avg. FPS 71.25 + 7,1% (actual GPU voltage ~1150mV, max frequency 2500Mhz, Voltage 1050 mV)
@310W + 55% avg. FPS 72.54 + 9,0% (actual GPU voltage ~1150mV, max frequency 2600Mhz, Voltage 1150 mV)
Have you increased memory settings on your X6800XT? (fast timings and frequency?)Similar to the sweet spot for my 6800XT on stock voltage curve. Literally just set max frequency slider in Adrenaline to 90% and it does 160-170W @ <949mV, frequency 2100-2200MHz with minimal performance loss and less than 60% of the power draw. I do not undervolt as I have zero tolerance for instability.
There is card to card variation but I would suspect a 6800 would take the crown for efficiency setups over the 6800XT. Techpowerup review of 6800 perf/W
At least at 1440p. At 1080p my 6600XT Red Devil card with a 90% frequency cap was routinely using 60W while gaming.
Both AMD and nVidia's latest generation of cards can be more efficient (esp a power limited 4090) - but you'll have to keep in mind these are early numbers on early drivers which clearly have a lot of room for improvement (looking at you, AMD).
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I can cap my max frequency for my 7900XT at 90% with maybe 5% performance loss and cut power usage down to <260W, which would match the stock 4090 performance for efficiency. This gives me the performance I want at 1440p 240Hz while capping power and thermals at very reasonable levels (card does not exceed 60C hotspot and stays quiet). If I set a FPS cap in-game, this would further increase efficiency by demanding a lot less of the GPU.
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If I had a specific application that favors nV or needed high-refresh rate 4K gaming, I would favor the RTX 4090 as the card to get for efficiency in that scenario.
At 1440p even the 6800/XT provides plenty of performance at a much better value given recent sales.
No, default timings for 6800XT.Have you increased memory settings on your X6800XT? (fast timings and frequency?)
I'll try stock settings and frequency @ 90% and see what that brings me.
Any reason you don't run fast timings and faster clock?No, default timings for 6800XT.
I'm using fast timings on the 7900XT due to idle power usage - enforcing fast timings vs default decreases idle power consumption on high-refresh rate multi-monitor setups by an additional 20-30% (bug?).
240Hz primary 1440p + 60Hz secondary 1440p = 31W power draw at idle. For comparison, my 6800XT draws 6W at idle but it's connected only to a 4K TV.
No reason other than I don't need the extra memory performance.Any reason you don't run fast timings and faster clock?
170W is a really big cut for the 3080 Ti; it's less than half its stock TDP. Even at the lower total TDP you're going to have fixed power costs for running that 384bit bus and 12 GDDR6X memory chips, and it's probably decently more than the 3060Ti and 3060. IIRC it was ~40W just for the memory ICs, so a big chunk.Yep, that's basically why I started this thread. I had assumed more execution units at lower clocks would be more efficient, but that's obviously not always the case.
What is your core voltage during this test? I'm doing doing Furmark 3840x2160 with 8xMSAA.Quick test with my FTW3 3080 10GB power limited to 45% (170W) running Furmark