[kitguru] AMD 7970/7950 price drops incoming

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Topweasel

Diamond Member
Oct 19, 2000
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Russian you are using the same messed up theory that most people did with 7970 release. Trying to draw up a value of a card based on the pricing of the previous generations after all cards have been released but before any new gen cards are out.

It's priced on competition and competition alone. Just like once competition hit AMD reset pricing. Companies aren't out to sell their products as cheap as they can. It's to hit supply vs. demand. With no competition from Nvidia, AMD can/will/should price the product at the point where supply hits demand, and they maximize profits.

For people not willing to buy a product at the currently priced levels, the choice is wait. See if Nvidia can manage to sell a card at the performance level you desire at the price you are willing to pay. If not you can wait till NVIDIA brings out competition near the pricing and see if either drop prices as part of free market competition. If you still can't get a part at the performance level you want, at the price you are willing to pay then you wait out for the next series and that performance level will be cheaper as faster cards are released and that performance level is considered a lower pricing tier.

This applies and has always applied to all products.
 

RussianSensation

Elite Member
Sep 5, 2003
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1. Die size alone doesn't determine manufacturing costs, and 28nm wafers cost a lot more than 40nm wafers. Therefore, manufacturing costs probably aren't lower. That, and yields are also lower than 40nm.

I never said die size alone determined costs. GTX580's die is 520mm^2. HD7870's die is 212mm^2. Rumored estimates are that 28nm wafers are 20-30% more expensive. GTX580 die size is 145% larger.

Also, AMD is dropping MSRP for HD7950 to $399.

There goes your cost argument. If HD7950 is selling for $399 with a 365mm^2 die size, HD7870 for $349 with a 212mm^2 is a rip off.

2. It doesn't matter what you think it replaces. Pricing is dictated by competition or lack thereof, and that's that.

Great logic. Next stop, HD8790 for $699 because it's the fastest single GPU.

Like I said from a business perspective, they can price it at for $999. If consumers start buying GPUs for $999, is it reasonable pricing? It would be. That doesn't change the fact that technology is different - performance gets cheaper / and or faster over time. HD7870 replaces HD6870. So it's not cheaper. Similarly, if you compare it to HD6970, given the time span, the 8-10% performance increase isn't sufficient given the $349 price. Again, it's overpriced. The fact that someone out there is willing to pay $349 doesn't mean it's great value.

3. Whether the 6950 could be unlocked or not doesn't matter. A 6950 is a 6950, and a 6970 is a 6970. If it could be unlocked that doesn't matter in terms of pricing.

It does matter. If 1 year from now we can't get faster performance in technology for a similar price (barring inflation), then something has changed about the industry. But this is a moot point now since HD7950 dropped to $399. That just supports the view many have held that HD7900 series was overpriced.

HD 7870 needs no price drops, except if NVIDIA comes out with a card that's just as fast or just a bit faster (probably GTX 670 or GTX 660) and costs less.

Really, so if there is no competition companies should be able to price products as high as they want? So Intel could be selling 2500K for $299 then because it destroys every Bulldozer chip. Why isn't Intel using AMD's predator pricing strategy? I understand that companies feel pressure to lower prices when there is more competition. But HD7870's pricing from a consumer perspective didn't make sense from day 1, regardless of competition because
it replaced HD6870. A $350 card is not a replacement for a $239 card. Just because a company was raising prices unreasonably, doesn't make it rational to consumers.

4. Your point is? GK104 and Tahiti have very comparable IPC, and they also overclock similarly.

Not exactly. GTX680 needs 1536 SPs and 70GB/sec lower memory bandwidth to accomplish the same feat that it takes a 2048 SP chip. But IPC for GPUs is a moot point. It's too complex to compare since GPU tasks are parallel in nature. So comparing IPC for GPUs is largely irrelevant. Still HD7970 for $470 is too expensive since the reference blower is loud, it consumes more power, requires a huge overclock just to hang with a stock 680. In other words, still overpriced.

The difference is that Tahiti has better clock scaling, and you gain more from an overclock than with Kepler. In other words, the gap is closed to nothing or goes a bit in favor of the HD 7970 if both are heavily overclocked.

Yes, it can be closed and you can even surpass the 680. For that, you'd want an after market quiet 7970. Once those cost $499, they start to make sense. Good luck using your reference 7970 @ 1200mhz though.

Reference HD 7970s at $470 are just fine given their performance. As was already said, the performance difference to the GTX 680 is only 5-10%.

You can believe what you want. It's your choice. The information is there and it shows otherwise. 15-16% supports the notion that it takes a 1050-1070 7970 to keep up.

a GTX 680 that can clock to 1100MHz stock and another one that does 1200MHz stock because of GPU Boost.

More misunderstanding on how GTX680s GPU Boost works. Yes, because 1 card did it in 1 review in 1 game, than most 680s can do 1200mhz out of the box.

BTW, almost no one plays Batman: AC, so not a very good argument for NVIDIA's superiority.

Batman AC sold 6 million units

Why don't you mention Metro 2033, too? That's one of the most intense games out there. Oh, it just so happens to favor AMD.

You can look at any popular modern games, SKYRIM, BF3, Witcher 2, Batman, etc. GTX680 wins in all of them.

Metro 2033 is good benchmark. Sure it runs faster on AMD cards, but it's still unplayable on any single GPU with everything maxed out. It's also a worse game than SKYRIM, BF3, Witcher 2 and Batman games.

How does that argument work for lowering the HD 7870's price but yet you keep saying at $470 the HD 7970 is overpriced when the GTX 680 probably costs less to manufacture?

It's not just cost that determines the product's pricing. If AMD can't design and sell a product that's profitable and performs as well as the competition, they should work harder. You keep looking at it from a business' perspective. Consumers don't care if it costs AMD $x to make the 7970. If they can buy a faster, quieter card for $30 more, it makes more sense for most people.

Speaking of which, the way NVIDIA was able to make the GTX 680 as fast as it is is by voiding it of almost any compute performance whatsoever.
The HD 7970 is 2-4x faster in compute, as is the older GTX 580, yet you don't mention that either.

Why would I? No one brought up Nvidia's GPGPU superiority when they were recommending HD4870/4890/5850/5870/6950/6970 cards for 3 full generations. Suddenly GPGPU is at the forefront of discussions? :sneaky:

If you need GPGPU compute, that's different. But since most people buy cards to play games, I think the crowd that cares for GPGPU would buy HD7970 even at $550. So should AMD price the 7970 to cater to 0.1% of these customers?

7. The HD 7850 provides HD 6970 performance for $240.

With overclocking, yes. Otherwise, no.

13% slower at 1080P @ Computerbase

The HD 6970 was $340, so you're flat-out wrong.

I was discussing MSRP. It was $369.

If you're gonna overclock, even on stock voltage, at its max clocks it's faster than both the HD 6970 AND GTX 570 also overclocked at max stock voltage.

So wait, you include overclocking which is luck of the draw for 7850 but ignore overclocking or unlocking for 6950? :sneaky:

Ya, there have been deals for $180-$210 GTX560Ti 448. That's better value than HD7850. So what's your point exactly? HD7850 needs a 20% overclock to beat HD6950 @ 6970 by 5%, 15 months later? If that impresses you, we just have different standards. Not to mention GTX570 offered all of this as well for $250-270 for months before 7850 launched.

Oh, HD7850 also performs worse than HD6870 in certain games. Glad you mentioned that.
 
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RussianSensation

Elite Member
Sep 5, 2003
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Russian you are using the same messed up theory that most people did with 7970 release. Trying to draw up a value of a card based on the pricing of the previous generations after all cards have been released but before any new gen cards are out.

It's priced on competition and competition alone. This applies and has always applied to all products.

It's because I recognize there are 2 sides to the story. The business side and the price/performance curve that technology follows. From a business perspective, using supply and demand, I am sure AMD could have sold 7970s for $600 even $650 when GTX680 wasn't around. In the absence of competition, then you could try pricing a product as high as possible. Why not $699? We've seen that when NV launched ~$830 8800GTX Ultra and GTX280 for $649. Where do we stop? The high-end consumers tend to be more price inelastic. So the value equation for them is more arbitrary anyway. At least in those cases it was pretty much known that those cards would have the performance crown for a while. Conversely, it was more or less a given that HD7970's performance crown was going to be taken away.

That brings me to the other side of the coin - innovation in technology and subsequent price/performance curve. What we generally expect in the world of technology is that things should get cheaper and/or faster over time. For GPUs that used to mean 50-75%+ performance increase over the next fastest GPU that it replaced it, roughly every 18-24 months. Was 7970 50% faster than 580 out of the box? No, it wasn't. Was it expected to hold the performance crown for 15-18 months like 8800GTX/GTX280 did? No, it wasn't. The pricing of HD7950 was even more laughable to be honest. Just 5% faster than a GTX580, 15 months later fro $450? That's the biggest slap in the face to consumers.

Since right now GTX680 is clearly faster and cheaper, HD7970's price cut was a foregone conclusion. The fact that HD7970 only outperformed 580 by 20% at launch added to the disappointment of its $550 price tag. Had AMD clocked them at 1050+ mhz out of the factory, it would be viewed differently. Only it's incredible overclocking saved it from being a total disappointment. If HD7970 didn't overclock, it would have been a very disappointing card. Even now, AMD got lucky when there are a lot of indicators to suggest that GTX680 wasn't even intended to be a true flagship for Kepler series.

Either way, the price drops are imminent but I am still of the view that HD7970 @ $479 for reference design is simply too expensive. $20 less for a card that needs an overclock just to match a quieter and faster card is still a questionable proposition.
 
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blastingcap

Diamond Member
Sep 16, 2010
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To be fair, some cards are not directly comparable because one has 1GB VRAM and the other has more than that, plus there are power/noise/heat differences. (Regarding the $200-300 price segment.)

I don't think anyone would argue that 28nm so far hasn't been disappointing from a "move the industry's price/perf ratio" perspective.

I'm going to see what price the 7950 1.5GB version settles at. If we're already seeing $399 3GB versions then I'd expect something like $350-375 for the 1.5GB version.
 
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RussianSensation

Elite Member
Sep 5, 2003
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To be fair, some cards are not directly comparable because one has 1GB VRAM and the other has more than that, plus there are power/noise/heat differences. (Regarding the $200-300 price segment.)

Agreed. I think HD7870 2GB of VRAM is a better bet than a GTX580 1.5GB at this point.

But going back to the main discussion, look at this review and tell me objectively that you'd still pay $479 for a reference 7970 if you can buy a GTX680 for $499?

For $20 savings, you'd get:
- worse power consumption
- louder reference blower
- worse performance in almost all newer games and overall worse gaming performance

And then there are driver issues too:

HD7970-LIGHTNING-86.jpg


It's amazing that even a $599 Lightning 7970 couldn't easily put away a stock 680 in single monitor gaming. A 925mhz reference 7970 is still a tough sell for only $20 less imho.
 
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Vesku

Diamond Member
Aug 25, 2005
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Here is where you are engaging in some sort of logical gymnastics. When it comes to performance comparison why are you comparing a giant Nvidia 40nm GPU to AMD's moderately sized 28nm GPU? Especially now that the 680 is out you should be comparing 680 to 580 and 7970 to 6970 in terms of improvements from the node change.


That brings me to the other side of the coin - innovation in technology and subsequent price/performance curve. What we generally expect in the world of technology is that things should get cheaper and/or faster over time. For GPUs that used to mean 50-75%+ performance increase over the next fastest GPU that it replaced it, roughly every 18-24 months. Was 7970 50% faster than 580 out of the box? No, it wasn't. Was it expected to hold the performance crown for 15-18 months like 8800GTX/GTX280 did? No, it wasn't.
 

blastingcap

Diamond Member
Sep 16, 2010
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Agreed. I think HD7870 2GB of VRAM is a better bet than 580 at this point.

But going back to the main discussion, look at this review and tell me objective that you'd still pay $479 for a reference 7970 if you can buy a GTX680 for $499?

- worse power consumption
- louder reference blower
- worse performance in almost all games tested

All that for $20 savings?

It's amazing that even a $599 Lightning 7970 couldn't easily put away a stock 680. A 925mhz 7970 has no business being priced just $20 less imho.

IIRC, when I was loudly banging the drum for much lower 7xxx prices, you called my suggested prices "optimistic" or something like that. So apparently I wanted even lower prices than you did. Nothing has changed since then--I still want lower prices than you do, just that I am trying to guess where prices will actually be after the price cuts per the KitGuru article. I think a fair price for a 7970 is something like $450. Reference. But fair only in the present situation of craptastically bad 28nm price/perf and lukewarm price competition.

Edit to add: AMD said that if they knew 28nm wouldn't be as horrible as they thought initially, they would have clocked the 7970 higher. They even said something like how 98% of 7970s can reach 1GHz, 95% can reach 1.1 GHz, etc. or something like that. It means even more power and noise and heat, but let's not pretend like the 7970 should have been clocked that low. Just like everyone knows that the GTX 460 should have been clocked higher at launch, too. If the 7970 had been 1GHz at launch, it wouldn't look as bad even despite the higher power/noise/heat, but realistically we already have such 7970's since almost all of them can clock that high anyway. This is incidentally why some people don't care at all about stock vs stock, but care more about "typical oc vs typical oc." See how two cards compare when they are both going flat-out at stock volts. Yes, oc headroom varies, but with enough samples we can guesstimate how much a typical card has in headroom and go from there.
 
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blackened23

Diamond Member
Jul 26, 2011
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Agreed. I think HD7870 2GB of VRAM is a better bet than a GTX580 1.5GB at this point.

But going back to the main discussion, look at this review and tell me objectively that you'd still pay $479 for a reference 7970 if you can buy a GTX680 for $499?

For $20 savings, you'd get:
- worse power consumption
- louder reference blower
- worse performance in almost all newer games and overall worse gaming performance

And then there are driver issues too:

HD7970-LIGHTNING-86.jpg


It's amazing that even a $599 Lightning 7970 couldn't easily put away a stock 680 in single monitor gaming. A 925mhz reference 7970 is still a tough sell for only $20 less imho.

Note that the GTX 680 is bugged in triple monitor witcher 2, see here: http://i28.photobucket.com/albums/c221/bananaXr/DSC_2901.jpg, reviewer doesn't mention it.


HD7970-LIGHTNING-81.jpg


HD7970-LIGHTNING-82.jpg


HD7970-LIGHTNING-83.jpg


It's amazing that even a $599 Lightning 7970 couldn't easily put away a stock 680 in single monitor gaming. A 925mhz reference 7970 is still a tough sell for only $20 less imho.

http://www.hardwarecanucks.com/foru...53263-msi-hd-7970-lightning-3gb-review-6.html

There's the actual review if you missed it. The MSI lightning 7970 certainly beat the 680 in quite a lot of those tests, although I agree its not worth the premium over the GTX 680 currently. Note that many 7970s are already 529.99, so with this price cut they will be in the 459-469 range. An even lower price would be ideal, though - so I do not disagree with you. Personally if the aftermarket 7970s could hit the 450$ spot, that would be true price performance. I still don't understand why AMD didn't release a 1.5gb version of the 7950/7970 - most gamers do not use eyefinity or surround. A 400$ 7970 would sell very well with 1.5gb, but AMD doesn't make smart decisions like this I suppose.
 
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Mopetar

Diamond Member
Jan 31, 2011
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Also, AMD is dropping MSRP for HD7950 to $399.

We don't know that for sure yet, so speculating about it is somewhat pointless in that anyone can simply choose an estimated MSRP that supports their arguments.

Great logic. Next stop, HD8790 for $699 because it's the fastest single GPU.

Like I said from a business perspective, they can price it at for $999. If consumers start buying GPUs for $999, is it reasonable pricing? It would be. That doesn't change the fact that technology is different - performance gets cheaper / and or faster over time. HD7870 replaces HD6870. So it's not cheaper. Similarly, if you compare it to HD6970, given the time span, the 8-10% performance increase isn't sufficient given the $349 price. Again, it's overpriced. The fact that someone out there is willing to pay $349 doesn't mean it's great value.

The only objective way of establishing value is based on market response. If they're selling out of the product, it's obviously a great value. Your own opinion is just that. If I were to claim that the 7870 wasn't even a great value at $20, I would probably be laughed at.

Also, in addition to performance increases, there's a decrease in power consumption, heat, and fan noise, as well as an increase in over-clock potential. Those also contribute to the value of a card as well.

If AMD does, in fact, lower prices that's an indication that the market collectively decided that the card was not valuable at that price. Otherwise one individual opinion doesn't count for anything.



Does that include console sales numbers as well? I have a hard time believing that Batman AC sold that much on the PC. According to VGChartz, the PC numbers are probably closer to 300k. Your position becomes somewhat disingenuous given that information.
 

DarkKnightDude

Senior member
Mar 10, 2011
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Does that include console sales numbers as well? I have a hard time believing that Batman AC sold that much on the PC. According to VGChartz, the PC numbers are probably closer to 300k. Your position becomes somewhat disingenuous given that information.

Probably off topic, but VGchartz only tracks retail PC copies sold, but no doubt the consoles sold a majority of that number.

Anyway, these price cuts will make things interesting, if it extends down to the 7870, could be an easy winner for 300 USD.
 

Grooveriding

Diamond Member
Dec 25, 2008
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That brings me to the other side of the coin - innovation in technology and subsequent price/performance curve. What we generally expect in the world of technology is that things should get cheaper and/or faster over time. For GPUs that used to mean 50-75%+ performance increase over the next fastest GPU that it replaced it, roughly every 18-24 months. Was 7970 50% faster than 580 out of the box? No, it wasn't. Was it expected to hold the performance crown for 15-18 months like 8800GTX/GTX280 did? No, it wasn't.

I know we heard that a whole lot on the forums before the 680 was released. But should we really have been comparing the 7970 to the 580 instead of to the 6970, of which it was about 40% faster than ?

Once the 680 was released that whole argument seemed to go dead silent and we heard nothing. Yet here was the 680, only 30% faster than the 580. The dismal generational increase was ignored because of a 10% lead on the 7970 and a $50 price disparity.

Rightly so, if you were actually a buyer of one of these cards. But the 680 is no different than the 7970, even worse in the context of nvidia building a new release off their prior one.

Not an issue for me. I accept that if you have the fastest card you can charge what you please for it, within sane boundaries, and it's acceptable. NV could of charged $599 for the 680 and probably sold just as many. Was just a smart move to charge $499 and garner mindshare and duck criticism of the dismal increase the 680 is over the 580 using the 7970 as a whipping boy :awe:
 

NIGELG

Senior member
Nov 4, 2009
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Maybe GPU tech is hitting a wall moving down the nodes.This arbitrary discussion based on history and curves is baffling to me.Let the market and competition decide.

I've always wanted a cool quiet card with 580 gtX performance for 300 bucks...7870 could be heading there..
 

Zebo

Elite Member
Jul 29, 2001
39,398
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The HD 7870 is within 5-10% of the performance of the GTX 580 and costs much, much less. Overclocking both the gap is reduced to none while the 7870 consumes a lot less power. Oh, and what's the GTX 580's price? $380. The HD 7870? $330. That's $50 cheaper for a card that's just as good, if not better.

HD 7970 needs to drop to $470 and then it'll be fine. Who in their right mind thinks AMD can just slash the price to $430? They're not a charity, and you're not entitled to get bargain basement pricing for a card that's only 5-10% slower than the GTX 680.

And the HD 7950 3GB at $400 is a decent price. Make a 1.5GB version $360-370 and then it'll be fine too.

At $330 the HD 7870 is well priced, and at $240 the HD 7850 is an absolute steal. Not only does it consume next to no power and overclock by more than 20%, but it's also within 5-10% of the GTX 570, a card that unless you get a third-party version of you'll get a crappy power phase design, meaning little overclocking. $290 for the GTX 570, $50 more than the HD 7850.

I don't compare one overpriced card to another. Try GTX570. It was going for $250-260 last couple months making 7870 a horrendous value. The GTX 580 is worse but I never argued it had good value. When you factor pwr use it's the worst price/performance card you can buy and 7870 is close.

ppl are not stupid - they know it that's why there is only like 20 reviews for 7870 card total at newegg. Compare that to GTX680 which just came out. Many happy ppl.
 
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toyota

Lifer
Apr 15, 2001
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I know we heard that a whole lot on the forums before the 680 was released. But should we really have been comparing the 7970 to the 580 instead of to the 6970, of which it was about 40% faster than ?

Once the 680 was released that whole argument seemed to go dead silent and we heard nothing. Yet here was the 680, only 30% faster than the 580. The dismal generational increase was ignored because of a 10% lead on the 7970 and a $50 price disparity.

Rightly so, if you were actually a buyer of one of these cards. But the 680 is no different than the 7970, even worse in the context of nvidia building a new release off their prior one.

Not an issue for me. I accept that if you have the fastest card you can charge what you please for it, within sane boundaries, and it's acceptable. NV could of charged $599 for the 680 and probably sold just as many. Was just a smart move to charge $499 and garner mindshare and duck criticism of the dismal increase the 680 is over the 580 using the 7970 as a whipping boy :awe:
you have said that numerous times and always purposely ignore that AMD charges you 50% more for that 40% increase over the 6970. the gtx680 at least gives you 35% more performance over the gtx580 for the SAME price that the gtx580 launched at. not a great performance increase over the previous gen but still a lot better deal than AMD gave consumers compared to their previous gen.
 
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blastingcap

Diamond Member
Sep 16, 2010
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I don't compare one overpriced card to another. Try GTX570. It was going for $250-260 last couple months making 7870 a horrendous value. The GTX 580 is worse but I never argued it had good value. When you factor pwr use it's the worst price/performance card you can buy and 7870 is close.

ppl are not stupid - they know it that's why there is only like 20 reviews for 7870 card total at newegg. Compare that to GTX680 which just came out. Many happy ppl.

Yeah and for less than $330 you can get a pair of GTX 470s and SLI them. So a $330 7870 is nothing special and still overpriced relative to 40nm cards.
 

Zebo

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Jul 29, 2001
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Worse yet Axel is AMD didnt give last generation ANY reason to upgrade. Same performance for same price? Never heard of that between generations. I am refering to 6950/6970 vs 7850/7870. At least nV gave users 25% more performance for same $500 as GTX 580 was in the GTX 680.

AMD tried to pull a fast one and no one bought it.
 

toyota

Lifer
Apr 15, 2001
12,957
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Worse yet Axel is AMD didnt give last generation ANY reason to upgrade. Same performance for same price? Never heard of that between generations. I am refering to 6950/6970 vs 7850/7870. At least nV gave users 25% more performance for same $500 as GTX 580 was in the GTX 680.

AMD tried to pull a fast one and no one bought it.
the gtx680 was actually a 36% increase over the gtx580 according to hardwarecanucks. yeah all AMD did was raise price points so you got the same or less performance than the previous gen cards that they replaced.
 

Elfear

Diamond Member
May 30, 2004
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You can believe what you want. It's your choice. The information is there and it shows otherwise. 15-16% supports the notion that it takes a 1050-1070 7970 to keep up.

Looks like a few other big review sites believe the same thing.

Computer Base

680 is 1% faster at 1600p and 8% faster at 1080p

TechPowerUp

680 is 4% faster at 1600p and 7% faster at 1920x1200

So at most a 10% overclock should even things up according to these guys at 1080p. 1020Mhz isn't considered a massive oc for a 7970. At 1600p at stock clocks they are essentially equal.

Regarding the stock blower, it can get loud if pushed to 50%+ but you really don't need to do that for stock voltage. 1100-1150Mhz should be pretty easy with the fan at 40%. The 680 has a better fan for sure but the reference 7970 fan isn't bad.
 

Zebo

Elite Member
Jul 29, 2001
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the gtx680 was actually a 36% increase over the gtx580 according to hardwarecanucks. yeah all AMD did was raise price points so you got the same or less performance than the previous gen cards that they replaced.

Well I was using BFGs stats since he has so many more games, but still same holds true. AMD gave nothing between generations. nV gave you a lot more performance for same price as their old parts.
 

blackened23

Diamond Member
Jul 26, 2011
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Well I was using BFGs stats since he has so many more games, but still same holds true. AMD gave nothing between generations. nV gave you a lot more performance for same price as their old parts.

I don't disagree with you at all, however AMD included a lot of expensive stuff in their reference design ( a good VRM which allows good overclocks, dual BIOS, 3gb VRAM) which they really should have lowered to get a better price point. I've mentioned this before but it is really confusing that AMD did not release a 1.5gb version of these cards without the dual BIOS stuff. Anyway, with overclocking the picture isn't quite so clear but they really should have brought it in at a better price point.
 

Zebo

Elite Member
Jul 29, 2001
39,398
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This is why we haven't seen a 1.5GB version 7950 imo, the 7870 would have to slot in at ~$299 to fit such a card. At this point I'm resigned to the idea we won't see better price/performance alignment until Nvidia gets competing products out the door. The 680 has finally had an effect and I would expect a similar re-adjustment when 660 and 670 hit retail.

If AMD were smart they would have sold millions of 7870s for $299 from day 1, it's too late after nV's products come. A lot of bad taste in ppls minds about that rip pricing will steer ppl and recommendations nVs way. Besides the ones that already snatched up cheap GTX 570s .. Unless you're committed to AMD of course ship has sailed for 7870 by a good margin.
 
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Grooveriding

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Dec 25, 2008
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you have said that numerous times and always purposely ignore that AMD charges you 50% more for that 40% increase over the 6970.

Sure, but that is a different can of worms. Again, they had the fastest card, they can charge what they please and people will pay, and they do and did.

To highlight the point further the gap has closed between AMD and nvidia's flagships even more this round. The 580 was faster over the 6970 than the 680 is over the 7970.

Your complaint is about AMD raising their pricing in general to levels alongside what nvidia has been charging. At the time of the 7970's release they could get away with it. Now the 680 is out and they can't get away with those prices anymore, hence the thread about the coming price drops :)


the gtx680 at least gives you 35% more performance over the gtx580 for the SAME price that the gtx580 launched at. not a great performance increase over the previous gen but still a lot better deal than AMD gave consumers compared to their previous gen.

Again, this doesn't change anything. The 480 was 63% faster than the 285 @ 1920x1200 4xAA and launched at the same $499 price.

QyzXm.jpg


With 8xAA at the same resolution it was almost twice as fast.


The 680 is 33% faster than the 580 at 1920x1080 4xAA and launched at the same $499 price.

50WcP.jpg


With 8xAA at that same resolution the performance lead for the 680 actually goes down rather than up as it did on the 480 against the 285.

Never mind that it lacks the sort of memory bandwidth with a fat bus and fillrate we are accustomed to on a high end nvidia GPU. Resulting in even poorer performance in some of the most demanding games.

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It's a dismal generational increase and nvidia is doing the exact same thing as AMD in offering a very poor perf/$ improvement in their next generation compared to what they have done in the past.

Where they were smart was clocking it up to give it a 10% lead on the 7970 and charging less. As I said, it let the dismal increase fly below the radar, while still garnering a premium price and not getting called out for being a poor increase in performance over the 580.

What will be interesting is to see what is to come in the future. Maybe this is the start of smaller increases being seen. Maybe we never get GK110 to the consumer, or if we do, it's priced at $699 or something ridiculous like that to account for the increased 28nm costs/yield difficulties.
 
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Zebo

Elite Member
Jul 29, 2001
39,398
19
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I don't disagree with you at all, however AMD included a lot of expensive stuff in their reference design ( a good VRM which allows good overclocks, dual BIOS, 3gb VRAM) which they really should have lowered to get a better price point. I've mentioned this before but it is really confusing that AMD did not release a 1.5gb version of these cards without the dual BIOS stuff. Anyway, with overclocking the picture isn't quite so clear but they really should have brought it in at a better price point.

Interesting? But nothing to do with price/performance the mid market focuses on like a laser. AMD tried shoveling mid range parts for high end prices. Or as you say they should have brought a better price point.:)
 

Vesku

Diamond Member
Aug 25, 2005
3,743
28
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Once the 7950 drops the rest of the line up below should get moved down a notch as well. If AMD is smart and good on their timing they will have the 7870 @ $299 for at least a month or more before Nvidia's 28nm answer.