Monday, February 27th 2012
GK104 Board Draws Power From 6+8 Pin Connectors, 3+2 VDD Phase Power Supply
The top desktop graphics card based on the NVIDIA GeForce Kepler 104 (GK104) ASIC, which has come to be known as GeForce GTX 670 Ti, is reported to use a 5 NVVDD phase power supply (VRM) design that draws power from 6-pin and 8-pin power connectors. The card will hence have 300W of power at its disposal. NVVDD phase 1 and 3 will be wired to the 6-pin connector; phase 2, 4, and 5 to the 8-pin connector. NVVDD phases 2, 4, and 5 feed power to the GPU, while phases 1 and 3 power the GDDR5 memory and other components on the board.
Source:
VR-Zone
36 Comments on GK104 Board Draws Power From 6+8 Pin Connectors, 3+2 VDD Phase Power Supply
Let the flames hit my invisible anti flame shield \o/
PCI-E 8pin - 4.167 amps for a total of 150 watts
Those two grounds allow for a higher amperage
12V x 2.083 amps x 3 Wires => 74.988Ws, 75W
12V x 4.167 amps x 3 Wires => 150.012Ws, 150W
Imagine gk104 has perf/clock between pitcairn (20% faster core) and 7970 (20% faster through core + bus width difference).
What happens when your card is limited to 950mhz at 225w and your lesser competitor is not at all constrained by tdp on a process capable of 1200mhz give or take at reasonable and/or perhaps stock voltage?
I'll tell you who you are...nvidia.
If they want to compete against 7950 and not 7870 they will need the tdp of 7970.
I wonder what happens if sea islands has a 28-30 cu 32 rop part(s) with 256-bit bus and 225w tdp...
The ampacity is not determined by the two extra grounds.
In fact, are those two extra 'grounds' actually not simply 'sense' wires that do not even carry current?
However, those two being there guarantees that the 3rd +12v wire will be there, which is really the important thing.