Maverick177
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- Mar 11, 2016
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+200Mhz OC for the 1060 vs +84Mhz OC for the 480 and yet 1060 still loses 8.2%. Thought GP106 has no trouble winning against Polaris?
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Would probably be fine at 1080p and also depends on how good Nvidias compression algorithms are. They've been pretty darn good.
+200Mhz OC for the 1060 vs +84Mhz OC for the 480 and yet 1060 still loses 6.6%. Thought GP106 has no trouble winning against Polaris?
All cards in this comparison are using stock settings. The variance for GTX 1080 clocks is between 1860 to 1886 MHz, probably caused by new GPU Boost 3.0 technology.
The maximum achievable 1,886 MHz, the GeForce GTX 1080 Founders Edition are more of a theoretical value: In games you never see this clock. There, the highest ever measured frequency was during the tests 1,835 MHz, but was also the clock after a few seconds history. In demanding titles 1.785 MHz has finally placed as the highest, realistic clock out.
+200Mhz OC for the 1060 vs +84Mhz OC for the 480 and yet 1060 still loses 8.2%. Thought GP106 has no trouble winning against Polaris?
Probably the exact opposite reason you are not.
Faster is faster to us. (whoever you think "you guys" are)
And faster to you has to be a certain percentage faster, I.E. >5%
to be considered faster.
Who is right here, technically? The people saying it's faster even if it's a smidge? Or the people saying it has to be >5% faster to really be considered faster?
Who's argument would hold up in court if it had to?
Irrelevant. Doesn't mean all products they claim to be faster need to be >5-10% faster.
Because it's a 4.4 TFLOPs VGA based on a 1280 SPs die half a size of GM204 targeting $249+. Only matching GTX 980 or a tiny bit faster would already be a technical accomplishment.
Yep,the GTX1060 boost clocks are meant to be 1.709GHZ and AIB AMD RX480 cards are meant to run around 1.325GHZ/1.35GHZ - that means an AIB overclocked GTX1060 is slower than an overclocked RX480.
Trading blows it seems. RX 480 wining in crypto and compute and GTX 1060 wining on gaming. Seems that both cards are great, but are purpoused in totally different areas.More GTX 1060 leaks.
http://videocardz.com/62086/nvidia-geforce-gtx-1060-rumors-part-5-full-specs-2-0-ghz-overclocking
Best Compubench Results
GTX 1060
https://compubench.com/device.jsp?benchmark=compu15d&os=Windows&api=cl&cpu-arch=x86&hwtype=dGPU&hwname=NVIDIA%20GeForce%20GTX%201060%206GB&did=36085769&D=NVIDIA%20GeForce%20GTX%201060%206GB
RX 480
https://compubench.com/device.jsp?b...Radeon+(TM)+RX+480+Graphics&testgroup=overall
Right. If you think that's an OCed GTX 1060 and not simply 3DMark listing maximum GPU Boost 3.0 like it does with other Pascal cards, please explain to us how this 'stock' GTX 1060 scores above 13K.
www.techpowerup.com/223920/nvidia-geforce-gtx-1060-3dmark-firestrike-performance-revealed
Stock RX 480 8GB is slower in all three Fire Strike benchmarks:
www.3dmark.com/compare/fs/9202637/fs/9202684/fs/9202725/fs/9180075/fs/9181008#
Fire Strike Graphics Score: 12.951
Fire Strike Extreme Graphics Score: 6.063
Fire Strike Ultra Graphics Score: 2.902-2.911
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As the later I simply can't understand how you could be happy with anything less than a 5% improvement when Nvidia says the 1060 will be faster than the 980.
Apart from the fact videocardz listed the maximum boost clock as 1.709GHZ??
All cards in this comparison are using stock settings. The variance for GTX 1080 clocks is between 1860 to 1886 MHz, probably caused by new GPU Boost 3.0 technology.
The maximum achievable 1,886 MHz, the GeForce GTX 1080 Founders Edition are more of a theoretical value: In games you never see this clock. There, the highest ever measured frequency was during the tests 1,835 MHz, but was also the clock after a few seconds history. In demanding titles 1.785 MHz has finally placed as the highest, realistic clock out.
Just because you have gotten overexcited and hyped the GTX1060 massively,you only have to blame yourself if the reality is not as clear cut as it seems.
Just look at this
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270X vs GTX770, thats what happen when you run out of VRAM, even at 1080P.
770 was 2GB card, no?
Same graph and 3GB 780 does fine.
Learn how to differentiate stock vs OC for NVIDIA cards and then we'll talk.
Also if it is Parm Mann from Hexus,they said they pre-heat the cards before benchmarks anyway,so it is unlikely to a run from cold.
All cards in this comparison are using stock settings. The variance for GTX 1080 clocks is between 1860 to 1886 MHz, probably caused by new GPU Boost 3.0 technology.
The maximum achievable 1,886 MHz, the GeForce GTX 1080 Founders Edition are more of a theoretical value: In games you never see this clock. There, the highest ever measured frequency was during the tests 1,835 MHz, but was also the clock after a few seconds history. In demanding titles 1.785 MHz has finally placed as the highest, realistic clock out.
@Sweepr: Wait what? 1060 boost clock is 1k7 and you are telling me in Firestrike it boosts wayy over to 1911Mhz? What ?
@Sweepr: Wait what? 1060 boost clock is 1k7 and you are telling me in Firestrike it boosts wayy over to 1911Mhz? What ?
Pre-launch Geforce GTX 1080 FE's:
1860 MHz
1886 MHz
Launch reviews confirm max theoretical clocks:
Today GTX 1060 gets listed at 1886 MHz and 1911 MHz, curiously the exact same 26 MHz gap. This is GPU Boost 3.0 for you.![]()
Yes, I'm telling you max theoretical clocks listed by 3DMark go above NVIDIA specs, just like the Geforce GTX 1080.
No,he is saying it is only running at 1.7GHZ in that benchmark and not boosting past the reference max boost clocks
since apparently Nvidia cards never boost consistently past the reference boost clocks.
The maximum achievable 1,886 MHz, the GeForce GTX 1080 Founders Edition are more of a theoretical value: In games you never see this clock. There, the highest ever measured frequency was during the tests 1,835 MHz, but was also the clock after a few seconds history. In demanding titles 1.785 MHz has finally placed as the highest, realistic clock out.
So what's the actual clock in Firestrike? Anyone has stock 1080 Firestrike restuls? Also, do you have a link to that Firestrike score you posted? I can do 17K in graphics score with GPUz showing my Fury@1Ghz. I don't trust screenshot.
snip
No,you are the one who is trying to say the cards never boost much past the 1.709GHZ clockspeed and the 1.911GHZ is not reached in real life.
Yep,the GTX1060 boost clocks are meant to be 1.709GHZ and AIB AMD RX480 cards are meant to run around 1.325GHZ/1.35GHZ - that means an AIB overclocked GTX1060 is slower than an overclocked RX480.
ComputerBase said:The maximum achievable 1,886 MHz, the GeForce GTX 1080 Founders Edition are more of a theoretical value: In games you never see this clock. There, the highest ever measured frequency was during the tests 1,835 MHz, but was also the clock after a few seconds history. In demanding titles 1.785 MHz has finally placed as the highest, realistic clock out.
USER8000 said:This is the other issue,say it is an AIB RX480(as a worse case scenario for the RX480),and using your view it only boosts to 1.785GHZ,or 76MHZ above the base boost clock,so even expecting a linear clock to performance increase,the card would have to running at close to 1.95GHZ to match that RX480 at 1.35GHZ since the latter apparently has a 8.2% higher graphics score anyway.
which again seems more like an OC model since it is 200MHZ more than the 1.7GHZ boost clock
I just hope your expectations are satisfied!!
But from my experience of having a AIB OC GTX960 myself,it consistently boosted much higher out of the box,ie, 140MHZ to 200MHZ past the reference boost clock. The GTX1060 listed at boosts to 1.9GHZ,which again seems more like an OC model since it is 200MHZ more than the official 1.7GHZ boost clock - also BTW,my card is only listed as having a 40MHZ to 50MHZ higher base clockspeed too.
But,you apparently think this is not an OC model,so we will need to agree to disagree and leave it at that then. I just hope your expectations are satisfied!!
right? that is the entire point. with the precedent of 2gb cards, it is a 1000% no brainer the right choice is a 4gb or higher card, even for 1080p. if you want to keep your card for more than 1 year.until 3GB runs intro the same problem as 2GB today.
We'll have to wait for launch reviews for that answer. Might as well be above 1.7 GHz but most likely below the listed clocks from 3DMark. My point is, the card is at stock here.