RussianSensation
Elite Member
- Sep 5, 2003
- 19,458
- 765
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If you actually read the rest of my post, you'd have realized - I did read his thread. Instead of just snipping my post and leaving 2xGPU...yeah, nevermind, I've had this dance with you - you only hear/argue what you want.
I snipped this part because it was obvious what I was talking about in reply to your concern:
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Last post on this, since I don't want to steer off course, more so, but this guy's kila-watt meter made me double think (and yes, I acknowledge he has more hardware than me, but even at 750-775W I wouldn't feel comfortable, considering my PSU is already 4 years old!![]()
Wow! I clearly attempted to clarify your PSU concerns over 2 overclocked 7970s as I presume you were thinking of getting another card, and that's how you respond to me? There wasn't even an ounce of argument in my post. I was simply pointing out that your estimate of 750-775W usage was off, which is why your concern is unwarranted. An overclocked 7970 on stock voltage does not use more than 250W and your CPU/mobo aren't going to be drawing 250W. Your PSU can handle 2 overclocked HD7970s, even 2 overvolted ones at 1.25V. Those are the facts. Yet, you are upset I tried to help you out and yet you were publicly stating that power consumption was a big deal and your PSU might not handle it since it's only an 850W? Why would you double think if you just said that you were aware that each 7970 @ 1.29V and 1250mhz uses 75-100W more than yours after reading the OP's thread in detail? Subtract 200W from his reading and what do you get? Certainly not 750-775W of power at the PSU level. His measurements are also at least 12% higher than real world power consumption since he didn't even have a Platinum rated PSU. I apologize if you are upset someone on these boards offered constructive feedback that actually gave you a peace of mind for upgrade options...It's actually ironic that you replied to me saying that "you only hear/argue what you want" when you ignored my post regarding PSU requirements, how power consumption differs between at the wall and at the PSU level and impact on GPU power consumption when overvolted to 1.29V vs. stock voltage.
Sweet card. For a hot grand you think they would include a nice back-plate -- Geesh!!
It would obstruct airflow in SLI where space is already limited. Some people may want to run 3 Titans in SLI and NV needed to accommodate that case. ^_^
Unless they are deaf?...
-- Top of the line rear exhaust cooler, less noise than a reference 680, makes the 7970GHz sound worse than it already does
There are is no such retail product as a reference designed HD7970GE. It's getting tiresome when people are linking/discussing noise levels of a card you can't buy! This mythical reference HD7970GE retail card has been non-existent for 8+ months now and AMD has no plans on launching any soon either. Go on Newegg and find a hot and loud HD7970GE. I'll get you both started.
Yeah, if AMD is really smart, AMD should be officially launching HD 7990 (dual 7970GE) as an official model number on the same day as Titan is launched (this Thursday), to steal thunder away from it. It should be even faster than GTX 690, for the same price as both 690 and Titan.
I don't think it would matter. The target market for the Titan would buy the Titan already over the 690/7990 to escape the multi-GPU scaling issues. The Titan would also be quieter, overclock better, use less power consumption and be a "cooler" part to own. And if someone just wanted the fastest 2 cards for $1000 based on FPS, they would buy individual Asus Matrix HD7970 Platinums x2 instead of HD7990. Unless you have a tiny case, or just hate the idea of 2 GPU cards, HD7990 doesn't make any sense when Asus Matrix 7970 Platinum exists and overclocks to 1300mhz+. AMD could launch a reference 7990 but it wouldn't do anything to detract from the Titan.
Also if you read AMD's recent transcript, they said that people who haven't upgraded last year are on an 18-24 months upgrade cycle based on their estimates. These people are either waiting for 20nm GPUs or they are waiting for prices of HD7000/600 cards to come down so that they could upgrade (Balla). None of these consumers will be buying the Titan. For existing HD7970CF/GTX670SLI/680SLI the Titan isn't a clear upgrade either. Yes, you get rid of micro-stutter but you'll lose a lot of value side-grading, or have to spend $2K for a real upgrade. Used GTX670/7970 cards won't fetch more than $600 which means $400 upgrade just to get rid of micro-stutter. Not many will find this appealing. A lot dual-GPU owners will wait until $500 Maxwell/Volcanic Islands drop to upgrade. It seems NV really aimed this card at people who will want DP performance and its compute features for Adobe CS6, computing, but don't necessarily need ECC, etc. The other group of people are highest end PC enthusiasts who just upgrade to the latest and greatest, and probably people who don't follow tech closely but can afford the best (pre-built boutique PC systems). Some of those buyers might build a new $5,000 PC for Crysis 3. At $1K but 1 year after many enthusiasts dropped $1K on HD7970x2/GTX680x2/690, I don't think the Titan is targeting those consumers.
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