- Nov 9, 2004
- 212
- 2
- 81
In my travels on Anandtech and elsewhere I've heard alot about rogue graphics drivers that can unlock a card's unused pipelines, so that an X800 can use however many pipelines are on its silicon instead of the eight it "offically" has.
How is this possible? I guess Nvidia and ATI use the same schematics for their 6800/6800GTs and X800/X800XTs and rely on drivers to keep extra pipelines dark on the lesser models? Do they ever produce cards specifically for the low end?
I guess it makes economic sense to do it their way, except that if I owned a 6800GT and learned that joe overclock up the road spent $$ less than I did on a 6800 and turned on his extra pipelines with a quick install, I'd be a little disappointed to say the least, and prepared to try it myself the next upgrade cycle. Do Nvidia and ATI figure most people won't do that and therefore it's not worth the assembly line effort to change the boards?
How is this possible? I guess Nvidia and ATI use the same schematics for their 6800/6800GTs and X800/X800XTs and rely on drivers to keep extra pipelines dark on the lesser models? Do they ever produce cards specifically for the low end?
I guess it makes economic sense to do it their way, except that if I owned a 6800GT and learned that joe overclock up the road spent $$ less than I did on a 6800 and turned on his extra pipelines with a quick install, I'd be a little disappointed to say the least, and prepared to try it myself the next upgrade cycle. Do Nvidia and ATI figure most people won't do that and therefore it's not worth the assembly line effort to change the boards?
