Difference in games seems unlikely, since two sites using the same game (metro last light) sees 42 and 102 Watts respectively. Also all of the cards should be reference (as far as I can tell), so there shouldn't be that big of a difference in bios settings.
Any way I'm not saying there's anything of note here, I just stumbled over it and found it mildly interesting.
As you well know, AMD has always competed with a smaller die and they come close to matching NV's top GPU for many generations now. The last time they moved first with new vram tech, they stomped on NV hard with a very small GPU that was half the size of NV's.
The performance gap was closed with Hawaii. It shows AMD is able to match NV with a smaller GPU. The next step that is logical, would mean their huge GPU + new vram tech should stomp on NV's huge GPU.
If it doesn't, it's a flop and going backwards in progress.
I mentioned this awhile ago and @RS and some others seem to think its OK for AMD to be slower, as long as they priced it cheaper. NO. Lisa is different, she's fully aware that approach is what has led them to this situation, losing the performance crown and forced to go cheap is NOT a good business strategy. Not for the CPUs and not for GPUs.
It's not OK to go balls to the walls with a massive GPU and new vram tech and be slower.
https://forum.beyond3d.com/threads/...series-speculation-rumor-thread.55600/page-71
Interesting. Tonga with 384 Bit bus.
https://forum.beyond3d.com/threads/...series-speculation-rumor-thread.55600/page-71
Interesting. Tonga with 384 Bit bus.
I hope that doesn't mean 3GB of Vram instead of 4?
It can also be a 6 GB card.
Wasn't 1792 GCN core chip supposed to have 4 GB of RAM and 256 Bit memory bus? Ultimately named R9 380?
It can also be a 6 GB card.
Wasn't 1792 GCN core chip supposed to have 4 GB of RAM and 256 Bit memory bus? Ultimately named R9 380?
It Also looks especially hideous.
So in theory 2048 GCN core and 384 Bit 3/6 GB of VRAM GPU would be... R9 380X.
It makes perfect sence, so far.
So in theory 2048 GCN core and 384 Bit 3/6 GB of VRAM GPU would be... R9 380X.
It makes perfect sence, so far.
You should check if the card is reference. The reference card does use more power than custom models.
I know there can be a difference between reference and custom cards, but that's not the issue. The issue is that sites using reference 980s and reference 290Xs, are measuring power deltas between the two cards that variate by as much as 60W.
Interestingly, comparing the 980 to the 980 Ti, the sites seem to be in somewhat better agreement (with 1 or 2 outliers):
50ish Watt group:
Techspot (37W delta - Metro Last Light)
Techreport (40W delta - Crysis 3)
THG (48W delta - says it's a game, but not which one)
TPU (55W - Metro Last Light)
Hardware Canucks (61W delta - Hitman)
computerbase.de (70W delta - Ryse)
100ish Watt group:
Anandtech (87W delta - Crysis 3)
Which would indicate that it is mainly the reference 290X samples review sites received that are variating quite significantly.
So it's 600mm2+ MINUS the memory controller which eats up a alot of die space. So it could have an effective 700-800mm2?
A man can dream.
Also 2GB is more than enough![]()
You also have to check if they measure peak gaming load or average gaming load. A peak measurement may not reflect accurately, kinda like min/max fps without context. Is it a minor blip or is it constant peaks?
Its best to compare per site since one would expect they repeat the test the same way.
http://www.sweclockers.com/nyhet/20623-amd-radeon-300-serien-dyker-upp-i-prislista posted from partner prices in swedish
![]()
So 600 for 390X? Is Grenada Hawaii renamed?
So 600 for 390X? Is Grenada Hawaii renamed?
If 380 has 4gb, then 380x won't have 3...
It will have 6, which it probably can't take advantage of.
