chimaxi83
Diamond Member
- May 18, 2003
- 5,457
- 63
- 101
It is always nice to read a very positive contribution in any thread. Thank you!
After a while, the threadcrapping trolls blend in with the rest of the noise
It is always nice to read a very positive contribution in any thread. Thank you!
I was just pointing out, don't use peak load power as some sort of metric.
Even AMD goes over their rated TDP for peak power; it was probably only that high for milisecond(s), which PSUs are supposed to be built to handle, and you should really have enough room for them even without that.
The companies also don't rerate every products' TDP.
5960X vs 4790K
TDP:140-88W=52W
System power:205-150W=55W
So are we talking a 380x paired to some AIO solution that you have to attach to your case? If so, AMD will surely sell these by the truckloads and close the gap with NVIDIA in market share. :sneaky:
So are we talking a 380x paired to some AIO solution that you have to attach to your case? If so, AMD will surely sell these by the truckloads and close the gap with NVIDIA in market share. :sneaky:
what's this now?
snip
Top tier stuff don't sell in volumes to be the cause of marketshare swings, you know that as well as anyone.
But certainly having a very fast, cool, quiet with blower advantages on a top tier GPU wouldn't do any harm.
And how well did those AMD cards sell? Did it improve their standing in the market and turn a profit for AMD? Was it a marketing success? I already know the answer so no need for a mile long reply with 100 meaningless graphs from TPU.
This can be the quietest and coolest operating GPU in the world with an awesome AIO but it won't gain mindshare or OEM wins and those are things AMD needs desperately.
What would help AMD is coming up with a cool efficient card that works on air and can compete against GM200.
What would help AMD is coming up with a cool efficient card that works on air and can compete against GM200.
Nope, because GM200 competition automatically means enthusiast segment, where volumes are very low and wont dent the marketshare % either way.
If you want to talk about marketshare, you have to focus on the mid-range and below.
You are confusing halo crown parts with marketshare movers.
Not only that but he assumes that market share moves 1 way for all segments. AMD could gain desktop market share by 5-10% with 300 series but lose 5-10% mobile market share on the laptop/mobile side and result in a net 0 gain or a loss in market share. He would then claim he was right to prove his point that AIO CLC 300W desktop flagship card was a failure. :hmm:
We all know if NV's Titan Z came with a 295X2 AIO CLC solution and 295X2 used the Titan Z's cooler and ran hot and throttled like the Titan Z, the AMD's solution would have been ridiculed. Instead, the 295X2 absolutely stomped the Titan Z in terms of noise levels and temps, but team green remained quiet as to how AMD's engineers outsmarted NV's when it came to choosing the proper cooling solution. The risk paid off and Titan Z was a total failure.
If AMD beats NV to HBM and Hybrid WC, it would be epic since a firm with less resources took major risks to try and lead the market with newest and latest technologies.
There's a theory that having the halo crown help with the perception with the rest of the line up, thereby boosting marketshare indirectly.
We'll see how it goes but I seriously hope AIO isn't the path they decide to take and that we see some forward thinking with regards to cooling.
If you believe one cooling design is all there is, then you can continue to bag AMD.
I for one, look forward to a water cooled top tier GPU out of the box. I'm pretty sure for users who don't want a 120mm rad, there will be good designs like the Tri-X, Vapor-X and PCS+.
If you believe one cooling design is all there is, then you can continue to bag AMD.
I for one, look forward to a water cooled top tier GPU out of the box. I'm pretty sure for users who don't want a 120mm rad, there will be good designs like the Tri-X, Vapor-X and PCS+.
He still hasn't addressed any of my data that shows AIO CLC is superior to any reference blower NV ever made for 250W+ TDP GPUs. Neither did he talk about 980 SLI reference cards throttling as per HardOCP, not the higher temperatures of the 780Ti reference card. He also is 100% sure no one will offer any other custom air cooled solutions for the 380X.
So its a problem for YOU, you can't handle a 120mm rad. Okay, now we understood the issue, we can all move along.
Agreed.They should simply offer those options from the get go.
It's something I personally would never consider as an enthusiast who frequently purchases flagship GPUs, not some guy who sits on the sidelines and cheerleads. It reeks of desperation to resort to AIO just to keep up with the competition and I'm sure many others will view it that way. Perception is a strong factor in end sales even if the data supports AIO > air cooled. Now push out a card that is cool, quiet, doesn't eat tons of power and can fit in your PCI-e slot with just an air cooler and you've got a winning design.
If AMD can push out 380X with air cooling that performs just as good as the AIO, then that would be admirable. AMD needs to put effort into their coolers, not be lazy like they were with their 290/290X. Perception is what killed 290/290X sales and the fact that aftermarket coolers like Tri-X came along later didn't matter, the damage was done. Just look at recent 970 events, AMD is almost giving away the 290/290X and people still won't touch them. Similarly a lot of people will likely write off 380X and it's derivatives after seeing AIO in a review, especially if it's competing against an air cooled GM200.
It has a great cooler, so you won't buy it because it sucks? This just makes no sense.
I would love to buy a card with such a cooler.
It's something I personally would never consider as an enthusiast who frequently purchases flagship GPUs, not some guy who sits on the sidelines and cheerleads. It reeks of desperation to resort to AIO just to keep up with the competition and I'm sure many others will view it that way. Perception is a strong factor in end sales even if the data supports AIO > air cooled. Now push out a card that is cool, quiet, doesn't eat tons of power and can fit in your PCI-e slot with just an air cooler and you've got a winning design.
If AMD can push out 380X with air cooling that performs just as good as the AIO, then that would be admirable. AMD needs to put effort into their coolers, not be lazy like they were with their 290/290X. Perception is what killed 290/290X sales and the fact that aftermarket coolers like Tri-X came along later didn't matter, the damage was done. Just look at recent 970 events, AMD is almost giving away the 290/290X and people still won't touch them. Similarly a lot of people will likely write off 380X and it's derivatives after seeing AIO in a review, especially if it's competing against an air cooled GM200.