Originally posted by: LTC8K6
How fast are 2 6600GT's compared to a single 6800U?
I still think the idea of buying one card now and one card later is just not going to work out well.
SLI only makes sense to me if you have the dough to buy the whole shebang at once using the top end cards.
Originally posted by: Transistor
Originally posted by: LTC8K6
How fast are 2 6600GT's compared to a single 6800U?
I still think the idea of buying one card now and one card later is just not going to work out well.
SLI only makes sense to me if you have the dough to buy the whole shebang at once using the top end cards.
It depends on the application and resolution. In most cases two 6600GTs in SLI would perform about the same as a 6800GT.
Here is a link to an Anandtech article on SLI performance, with benchmarks.
http://www.anandtech.com/video/showdoc.aspx?i=2284
Originally posted by: biostud
As far as I can see it's the total system consumption. So when using 365W a 400W PSU would in theory be enough, although one with a bit more headroom would be recomended
Originally posted by: fkloster
Only bad news w/2 6600GTs is that the motherboard will still cost +/- $300 give or take 20 bones...
Originally posted by: biostud
As far as I can see it's the total system consumption. So when using 365W a 400W PSU would in theory be enough, although one with a bit more headroom would be recomended
Originally posted by: Regs
Originally posted by: biostud
As far as I can see it's the total system consumption. So when using 365W a 400W PSU would in theory be enough, although one with a bit more headroom would be recomended
I think you would need more than a 125 watt PSU to run a 6800 in non-SLI.
Originally posted by: mechBgon
Shuttle began to use 350W PSUs a while back.
Bigger picture: an SLI board will need a 24-pin ATX cable anyway, so it's new-PSU time regardless (for 99.8% of us, at least).![]()
Originally posted by: biostud
I wouldn't run 6800 in SLI with less than 500W
20 pins. I was checking out the Enermax units that do 24-pin and found their hybrid 24/20 cable interesting: picOriginally posted by: fkloster
Originally posted by: mechBgon
Shuttle began to use 350W PSUs a while back.
Bigger picture: an SLI board will need a 24-pin ATX cable anyway, so it's new-PSU time regardless (for 99.8% of us, at least).![]()
stupid question... how many pins are used on the current ATX cables?
Originally posted by: Matthias99
Originally posted by: biostud
I wouldn't run 6800 in SLI with less than 500W
Quality >* quantity when it comes to power supplies. If you have a ~365W load, it would be better to have a *good* 400W PSU than a cheap 500W unit -- and you'd be wasting 130W of capacity in a *good* 500W PSU. They're designed to run at the rated load, and often are more efficient when close to capacity. Of course, if you want to overclock, you'll need more power.
I'd want 400W, certainly, given those power numbers linked to above. But 500+W is still overkill unless you're also adding a ton of other peripherals or have dual CPUs as well.
Originally posted by: fkloster
Originally posted by: Matthias99
Originally posted by: biostud
I wouldn't run 6800 in SLI with less than 500W
Quality >* quantity when it comes to power supplies. If you have a ~365W load, it would be better to have a *good* 400W PSU than a cheap 500W unit -- and you'd be wasting 130W of capacity in a *good* 500W PSU. They're designed to run at the rated load, and often are more efficient when close to capacity. Of course, if you want to overclock, you'll need more power.
I'd want 400W, certainly, given those power numbers linked to above. But 500+W is still overkill unless you're also adding a ton of other peripherals or have dual CPUs as well.
Very good point... I know how important quality it.... I meant 500 watt QUALITY powersupply ( i do not agree with your points about running a quality 400 power supply to run a SLI power rig)
Originally posted by: DAPUNISHER
Paragon made a nice guide for determining your power needs Text
Originally posted by: fkloster
Originally posted by: DAPUNISHER
Paragon made a nice guide for determining your power needs Text
Well after reading paragons sweet ass guide.... it looks like overclockers who want SLI will be buying 650 watt peak (510 watt nominal) power supplys!!
Very good point... I know how important quality it.... I meant 500 watt QUALITY powersupply ( i do not agree with your points about running a quality 400 power supply to run a SLI power rig)