AnandThenMan
Diamond Member
- Nov 11, 2004
- 3,991
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I would love an AIO water cooled card, it will bolt perfectly into my Cooler Master case in fact I could mount two no problem.
Bro, you water cool your CPU but it ain't okay for a GPU? If anything, GPUs need it more than CPUs nowadays. Most people I talk to perceives aio as superior and more attractive. You're just different. But, you wouldn't touch amd, regardless. So why bother, right?
I think they should just release it with an open air design. Once the aftermarket coolers were available for the 290/290X they were a great buy. They should simply offer those options from the get go.
Did I really read correctly!!?
The difference between the two cards' TDP is so miniscule, that having a cooler like vaporx, will easily address any heat and noise concerns. 380x doesn't need a water cooler when an 8gb 290x with vapor kit can shame some 970s. AMD has got bad press before for sloppy reference coolers, and by golly this is quite something. Most likely this is just something done to not get bad press, but it also allows better thermals, lower noise.You don't think needing an AIO water solution for a GPU is a sign that they need to do some work to improve power/heat? I'd buy AMD, but I won't buy a card requiring water just to compete.
You don't think needing an AIO water solution for a GPU is a sign that they need to do some work to improve power/heat? I'd buy AMD, but I won't buy a card requiring water just to compete.
Yes, you usually go SLI, we believe you. This is a CF thread...Apparently not so I'll reiterate: Perception is a very strong factor for sales. If consumers see that AMD needs to resort to AIO to compete with an air cooled GM200, they'll view it as a desperate brute force attempt by AMD to stay relevant. But from a personal standpoint, yeah I wouldn't bother with an AIO GPU because I usually go SLI and it wouldn't have anywhere to be placed in my mid tower case. IF AMD releases a superior air cooled solution AND WC, then that'll be fantastic but relying on third party vendors to release an air solution later on would be a huge mistake.
You don't think needing an AIO water solution for a GPU is a sign that they need to do some work to improve power/heat? I'd buy AMD, but I won't buy a card requiring water just to compete.
The difference between the two cards' TDP is so miniscule, that having a cooler like vaporx, will easily address any heat and noise concerns. 380x doesn't need a water cooler when an 8gb 290x with vapor kit can shame some 970s. AMD has got bad press before for sloppy reference coolers, and by golly this is quite something. Most likely this is just something done to not get bad press, but it also allows better thermals, lower noise.
Also, the same information is available over last 3-4 pages in much more detail, but i suspect you didn't read much.
Power is not an isolated variable. Do you understand the concept of Perf/w?
We are looking at a 50% increase in efficiency and raw performance.
If NV users fail to see merit in such a design, then they can stick with buying NV. No love lost.
To give you an example you can comprehend better.
Imagine NV made a GPU that uses 400W of power. Sounds crazy high, right? Now, what if that single GPU had better performance than SLI 980s, would that make it bad?
A 120mm rad for a single GPU is a sad joke. A very tiny fraction of enthusiasts will buy it but I doubt our very own RS who is campaigning for AIO so hard will even buy one. I'd be shocked if he did really. As someone who frequently upgrades GPUs, I'd never buy one that requires AIO, even if NVIDIA had a GM200 that blew the doors off anything else. If I want a watercooled GPU, I'll use my own setup, not some second tier OEM design.
Doesn't matter if AIO can do a better job cooling or not, it's large and unwieldy for a single GPU solution. As for reference 980 SLI throttling, I can't speak to that since mine are ACX 2.0 and have 0 throttling problems. In fact, nobody I know that owns a 980 (stock blower or otherwise) have experienced throttling. If this were a widespread issue, we'd hear about it, especially from you.
And yet AIO CPU cooling has been a reality for five years now and seems to be a successful product. So I fail to understand your rage against them. A single 120mm radiator bolted to the back of a case hardly qualifies as "large and unwieldy".
I've not said that I view high power cards themselves bad; that 400W card you're talking about might be worth buying by someone. That someone would not be me. My argument here is more specifically that cards like a 380 would, in my eyes, be something I had zero interest in if the reference cooler was an AIO.
Also, way to be condescending.
This is what you said, to be clear:
"You don't think needing an AIO water solution for a GPU is a sign that they need to do some work to improve power/heat? I'd buy AMD, but I won't buy a card requiring water just to compete."
You think power and heat is a sign they need to improve their GPU, but you fail to understand nobody buys a GPU just to admire its power & heat. They do so for performance. Power & heat are part of the package.
+50% performance at the same power. Pretty good, no?
You buy AMD, but you won't buy a card with water to compete.. fair enough, your opinion, its an entitlement. But do you realize there will most likely be AIB air designs that keep R290X class of power use at ~70C, with low noise?
That's lower temps than reference NV blowers with lower noise. So what's the problem?
If NV made a 400W monster with more performance than SLI 980s, it will be an awesome enthusiast GPU. It won't be for you, fair enough.
For your consideration, something which was already posted in the thread, so i'm not going to post images for you. However, have a look:I have not yet seen a benchmark showing a 290x shaming a 970; every benchmark I see shows the 970 having a general advantage (how this changes with knowledge of the 970 shenanigans/people using FCAT I don't know).
I've been watching on and off. It's a 14 page thread.
As for AIOs - some might think they're awesome. I don't. I've made my feelings clear on these AIOs enough times, but put simply, a basic vapor chamber cooler has a higher MTBF, and if the fan fails, it continues to cool.
I've not said that I view high power cards themselves bad; that 400W card you're talking about might be worth buying by someone. That someone would not be me. My argument here is more specifically that cards like a 380 would, in my eyes, be something I had zero interest in if the reference cooler was an AIO.
Also, way to be condescending.
Wait, so if they made the R380X exactly the same as it were if its water cooled, ie. similar power to R290X and offered 50% more performance.. but if they made it have a reference air cooler, it would be good?
"it's another thing for a mainstream GPU to *require* an AIO solution"
ps. This isn't a mainstream GPU. It's not a 750ti or 960.
You are making it seem like whatever AMD does is fail, because it seems like this:
"hey guys, we've improved efficiency and performance by 50% and we also improved our reference cooler so its quieter & cooler than some of the best open air designs that dump heat in your case..."
"nah bro, you should have gone air on it so it dumps that heat in the case instead and run hotter & louder"
First off, this is all speculation about the perceived efficiency gains of this card, we don't have any real numbers, just stuff purportedly leaked by ChipHell. Secondly, he is saying that if AMD needs AIO to compete with an air cooled NV solution, then they have failed, especially if GM200 has similar efficiency gains and doesn't rely on water cooling to attain that level of performance.
Secondly, I care about aesthetics when I build PCs, I don't need or want a couple ugly AIO's bolted outside my system and I suspect many others don't either.
It means that some people still believe that in a well-ventilated modern case, the blower style flagship GPU will run cooler and quieter than the best after-market open air cooled solutions. It's simply not true. You can take any flagship NV blower card and it will never outperform the MSI Gaming 970/980 in noise levels and temperatures at full load in a well-ventilated case.
First off, this is all speculation about the perceived efficiency gains of this card, we don't have any real numbers, just stuff purportedly leaked by ChipHell. Secondly, he is saying that if AMD needs AIO to compete with an air cooled NV solution, then they have failed, especially if GM200 has similar efficiency gains and doesn't rely on water cooling to attain that level of performance.
Secondly, I care about aesthetics when I build PCs, I don't need or want a couple ugly AIO's bolted outside my system and I suspect many others don't either.