Questions for Nvidia.

navecko

Junior Member
Dec 15, 2005
16
0
0
How long until we see four gpus on a single pcb? Why can't you just put two on the same slice?

The fastest single-core 90nm AMD cpu did 3.0 stock. Their fastest 90nm dual-core cpu did 2.8 stock. Is it reasonable to infer that two gpus could be put on the same slice and run nearly as fast as if they each had their own slice?

Or better yet why not just double all the pipes and shaders and interconnecting stuff. Wouldn't that lead to a die twice the size allowing for twice as much heat transfer while avioding the SLI performance tax (~15±)?

Is everything titrated by the marketing dept?
 

TuxDave

Lifer
Oct 8, 2002
10,571
3
71
I'm not sure what you're talking about when you are referring to 'slice' but doubling the size of a die will lead to a much much much more expensive die. I would rather pay for two of them than one that's double the size.
 

imported_Rat

Senior member
Sep 11, 2006
264
0
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Didn't the Voodoo 5 6000 or whatever have 4 GPUs on one card? That was a popular toy. I'd prefer that they utilized clever engineering rather than just shoehorning another chip onto that fragile piece of fibreglass.
 

imported_inspire

Senior member
Jun 29, 2006
986
0
0
Doesn't the X1900X have double the pipelines of the 7900 GT ? And the performance gain isn't that spectacular (And yes, I know I'm comparing apples and oranges in a way...) I don't know a whole lot about it, but from what I can gather, with the current generation of GPUs, performance doesn't scale that efficiently by simply adding more pipelines.

 

Genx87

Lifer
Apr 8, 2002
41,091
513
126
It makes more sense from a manufacturing point of view to keep the dies seperate and combine them post fabbing on the PCB. My guess the reason we havent seen 4 on a single PCB is heat and power consumption.
 

navecko

Junior Member
Dec 15, 2005
16
0
0
A good point was made regarding cost. It must be that increasing the ammount of sillicon per chip causes an exponential decrease in stability due to impurities/imperfections. If there are more chips per wafer there can be greater disparity when they are binned. Thats why AMD's 90nm dualcore chips were more expensive than Intel's 90nm ones.
 

Tengu13

Junior Member
Sep 15, 2006
3
0
0
Originally posted by: Rat
Didn't the Voodoo 5 6000 or whatever have 4 GPUs on one card? That was a popular toy. I'd prefer that they utilized clever engineering rather than just shoehorning another chip onto that fragile piece of fibreglass.

I remember that card, I had one. It was 4 GPU's on one card, but it was gigantic. Not to mention had no support for newer games because at the time, SLI wasn't very popular and OpenGL on Voodoo's sucked because it was emulated through their proprietary Glide engine. Never the less, I loved that card. I'm kinda sad I sold it and bought a cheaper Radeon that performed better. I thought I'd never see SLI again after Voodoo died... but low and behold! I guess the aquisition of 3dfx by nVidia has revived old dinosaurs.
 

Valrandir

Member
Aug 14, 2005
37
0
0
Are you sure that you had one Tengu13?
There was like only 4 such card manufactured, they never made it to production.
Maybe you mean a Voodoo 5500 with two CPU?
 

RadiclDreamer

Diamond Member
Aug 8, 2004
8,622
40
91
Originally posted by: Valrandir
Are you sure that you had one Tengu13?
There was like only 4 such card manufactured, they never made it to production.
Maybe you mean a Voodoo 5500 with two CPU?

Hes definately talking about the voodoo 5 5500 64mb AGP, the 6000 is so rare that there are only a small amount (less that 10 id guess) that were produced
 

RadiclDreamer

Diamond Member
Aug 8, 2004
8,622
40
91
Originally posted by: Tengu13
Originally posted by: Rat
Didn't the Voodoo 5 6000 or whatever have 4 GPUs on one card? That was a popular toy. I'd prefer that they utilized clever engineering rather than just shoehorning another chip onto that fragile piece of fibreglass.

I remember that card, I had one. It was 4 GPU's on one card, but it was gigantic. Not to mention had no support for newer games because at the time, SLI wasn't very popular and OpenGL on Voodoo's sucked because it was emulated through their proprietary Glide engine. Never the less, I loved that card. I'm kinda sad I sold it and bought a cheaper Radeon that performed better. I thought I'd never see SLI again after Voodoo died... but low and behold! I guess the aquisition of 3dfx by nVidia has revived old dinosaurs.
OpenGL rocked on those cards as did glide
 

fire400

Diamond Member
Nov 21, 2005
5,204
21
81
OpenGL versus DirectX

which one has more support?

OpenGL is a dying technology.