boxleitnerb
Platinum Member
- Nov 1, 2011
- 2,605
- 6
- 81
RS:
Please stop using peak values, they are irrelevant. What is important is average values. May I (again) refer to the analysis of 3DC:
http://www.3dcenter.org/artikel/launch-analyse-nvidia-geforce-gtx-660
http://www.3dcenter.org/artikel/eine-neubetrachtung-des-grafikkarten-stromverbrauchs
Multiple games, no peak values, card only. This is a good pool of data - what you're always quoting is not.
TDP is thermal design power. Thermal energy transfer is very slow compared to electrical energy transfer. A card may have a TDP of 250W, use 250W on average but still spike to 280W or so. Those 280W, however, say nothing about the actual averaged power use across relevant workloads, i.e. games.
Thanks for the info, didn't know that.
Please stop using peak values, they are irrelevant. What is important is average values. May I (again) refer to the analysis of 3DC:
http://www.3dcenter.org/artikel/launch-analyse-nvidia-geforce-gtx-660
http://www.3dcenter.org/artikel/eine-neubetrachtung-des-grafikkarten-stromverbrauchs
Multiple games, no peak values, card only. This is a good pool of data - what you're always quoting is not.
TDP is thermal design power. Thermal energy transfer is very slow compared to electrical energy transfer. A card may have a TDP of 250W, use 250W on average but still spike to 280W or so. Those 280W, however, say nothing about the actual averaged power use across relevant workloads, i.e. games.
When prices are cut by a manufacturer, rebates are given to the partners for prior purchases to balance stocks. Now, I'm not saying they make up for everything they've sold them, but overall the manufacturer eats the price drop.
Thanks for the info, didn't know that.
Last edited:
