Are you serious? A person with a $200- $300 budget should wait on Vega?
RS showed that only 15% of total discrete sales were above $300 and 85% was $300 and below. This is the present reality.
For 2015, it was actually
11.8% [5.9M/50M] but I estimated an increase to 15% by now given the trends towards more expensive cards.
"The total number of AIBs sold in 2015 was 50 million compared to 44 million in 2014. Of these, about 5.9 million are enthusiast level AIBs (add-in boards / discreet graphics cards) shipped in 2015 compared to 2.9 million in 2014." ~
Source
We could see >=$300 dGPU segment experiencing growth in 2016 due to some highly anticipated games coming out, DX12 games more or less making older GPUs obsolete forcing upgrades and record high pent-up demand from gamers using older gen cards (i.e., 70% of NV users are on pre-Maxwell cards).
Just my guess. As cool as it was, it hurt Fury X at launch due to pump issues, it added cost to the overall build which was most likely needed to keep the card cool and quiet.
The pump issues were unfortunate but were later fixed by CM. The reason the AIO CLC was 'required' is due to the card's small 7.5" footprint. How would you cool 280W with a blower/open air cooler? It's not required if you extend the PCB -- in fact Sapphire Fury Tri-X is more or less as quiet at
max load @ max overclocked than a Titan blower 980Ti is at idle. So no, it's not "required" to have AIO CLC to cool a 280-300W 10.5-12 inch card, but sure a 7.5" card requires it.
Unfortunately for AMD, using the far superior cooling system brought too much negative publicity due to poor launch execution. With a properly working AIO CLC, most people would be amazed at how well it works on 250-300W cards, or even 500W cards.
Agree (though harder to fit multiple CLC radiators in multi-card boutique rigs)
FWIW - I hope they keep doing the reference CLC. Its one of the things that attracted me to the Fury X in the first place and its a good differentiator for AMD
After using an AIO CLC on the R9 295X2 and seeing the improved larger rad doing even better on Radeon Pro Duo, I am sold. If prices are similar and the card is well built, I'd always go AIO CLC > open air cooling > blower.
Asus Strix 980Ti SLI = 85C @ 58% fan speed
Radeon Pro Duo =
55C @
24% fan speed (almost all of it is exhausted out of the case)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CMsoQwbxELo
If the case can accommodate it, it's impossible to compete with 2-4 cards with AIO CLCs exhausting 95% of 250-300W of heat out of the case, while operating quietly. To outperform that, a full custom water loop costing hundreds if not $1000+ is required, and of course you don't get any warranty with it.
As far as 90%+ of the gaming market goes, I cannot think of many cases that won't fit a single 120mm rad. AMD or NV,
AIO CLC is simply amazing compared to any open air cooled card, with the ONLY exception being MSI Lightning 980Ti.
Moving-up Vega is GREAT news. AMD is taking Pascal's release seriously and doesn't want to abandon the high-end for 9 months. Interesting enough, this same timeframe is probably when we will see NV launch the 1060/1060Ti. Different approaches for sure, and it will be interesting to see what bears more fruit.
Regardless, AMD has the opportunity to release something better than Pascal 1.0 and trump some enthusiasm for NV HBM parts in 2017. Great move. Also could give current 980Ti owners a more beneficial upgrade path vs the 1080/1070 that targets more 7xx and 6xx users IMHO.
If true, I am concerned that they are going to sacrifice some performance. Why would all of a sudden Vega move up 2-3 months? Hopefully it has more to do with the volume of HBM2 and yields rather than AMD releasing a cut-down Vega 11 or worse Vega 11 with 15-20% lower GPU clocks on top just so that they have something on the table.
Then again, this
14nm node could be very long, which means AMD/NV will love to sell us 3-4 flagships on the same node over the next 3-4 years.
