Skurge
Diamond Member
- Aug 17, 2009
- 5,195
- 1
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my sentiments exactly Mr.Tempered81. Another 6990 myth is about to be busted ??
http://www.gamemunition.com/news/nvi...s-off-gtx-590/ <---- told ya 10 + 4 (total)
Yes. I was mistaken. My apologies.
my sentiments exactly Mr.Tempered81. Another 6990 myth is about to be busted ??
http://www.gamemunition.com/news/nvi...s-off-gtx-590/ <---- told ya 10 + 4 (total)
Are you guys sure there aren't 10 per GPU?
Yes. I was mistaken. My apologies.
Are you guys sure there aren't 10 per GPU?
Check this video at exactly 1:07
http://www.gamemunition.com/news/nvidia-shows-off-gtx-590/
10 for the whole card, 5 for each GPU??
I would expect that many from something extreme like an ASUS ROG card or MSI lightning. I doubt a reference card would have that many.
Yes. I was mistaken. My apologies.
Video link. watch. time stamp 1:07.
He says 10 for the GPUs, that means both. If you look at the PCB, you can see there are 5 at the bottom and 5 at the top.
No no. I apologize for sounding too combative.
But I feel so much disinformations and even straightforward lies has been said, while even basic things get lost in the heat.
I was on that site many times these last couple of days. Read all 6990/590 articles several times, and would have soooo much to ask those guys
110c is much too hot for a GPU and will kill it quickly.
I don't exactly know when programmable VRM was first introduced on video card, but it wasn't until Fermi/Cypress that it becomes well known.
The fact that it can pull as much power as 580 SLI and still not fail is quite impressive.
Wow that's impressive, even faster than a GTX 580 in SLI. Definitively the GTX 590 can't match the overclocking capabilities of the HD 6990.
Not true. I first tried software voltage control on a X1800XL, enthusiasts knew about it at that time. Just to be clear, I don't think non-enthusiasts know at all about voltage control even with Fermi/Cypress. I believe the X1XX cards from ATI were the first to make it "mainstream" for enthusiasts (ie. pure software, no hard mods).
It is faster there, but I DOUBT the 6990 even at 972 core would be pulling as much power as 580SLI. It would be literally impossible to cool it on the stock cooler.
http://www.legionhardware.com/articles_pages/ati_radeon_hd_5970_overclocking_problems,2.html
HD5970
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Guess what ......
I know because i had one![]()
Even if you had a 590 you still think you should/would or want to be able to?![]()
I don't disagree and, im one like many here that OC/OV there hardware and i have said it many times now that REFERENCE GTX590 is not for the big boys.
But we are not the only customers of cards like HD6990 and GTX590, there are people who don’t OC/OV and still get the high end products.
Just because a product don’t OC or OV like we wanted it doesn’t make it of a lower quality or not properly engineered. If it doesn’t pass your standards then don’t buy it, move on and get the best you thing it suits your needs.
I dont even know why you guys are even debating the merits of the 590 reference PCB. It's woefully inadequate. It has 10x 35A VRMs at 80% efficiency for both GPUs. At its stock vcore, both GPUs have ~300W max b4 the VRMs get into stress zone. It's clear why NV has released drivers to prevent vcore manipulation as it will shorten the lifespan of these components to run well beyond specs (they are already running beyond specs at stock) when OC further.
The 6990 reference PCB is over-engineered. It's overpowered. For enthusiasts who decide to go water cooling, you can overvolt and get ridiculous OC to 1.1ghz. Even on air it can reach 1ghz (albeit noisy, but its stable and won't explode). Each GPU on the 6990 has ~ the same VRM capabilities as both GPUs on the 590. 4x 80A Volterra VRMs each GPU.
