Friday, April 5th 2013
ASUS GeForce GTX Titan Sets Four 3DMark World Records
ASUS today announced that the ASUS GeForce GTX Titan graphics card has established four new 3DMark world records, supervised by in-house ROG overclocking experts Andre Yang and Shamino. The ASUS GeForce GTX Titan is the most powerful single-GPU graphics card currently available, as demonstrated with record-breaking 3DMark11 scores of 36658 marks in the Entry preset, 37263 marks in the Performance preset, and 22076 marks in the Extreme preset. It has also set a world record of 21818 in 3DMark Fire Strike, the latest and most demanding benchmark from Futuremark.
ROG overclocking expert Andre Yang set the new 3DMark11 records using liquid nitrogen-cooled ASUS GeForce GTX Titan cards in a four-way NVIDIA SLI configuration with an ROG Rampage IV Extreme motherboard and an Intel Core i7-3970X processor. Additional information on these world records and the configurations used can be found here. The 3DMark Fire Strike world record was achieved by Andre Yang and fellow ROG team member and overclocker Shamino using two ASUS GeForce GTX Titan cards in NVIDIA SLI. This achievement also used an ROG Rampage IV Extreme motherboard and an Intel Core i7-3970X processor.About the ASUS GeForce GTX Titan
The ASUS GeForce GTX Titan has a dual-slot design with a full NVIDIA Kepler GPU - a GPU previously reserved for supercomputer applications. It features 2688 CUDA cores and a 384-bit memory interface for its 6GB GDDR5 video memory, clocked at 6000MHz. The ASUS GeForce GTX Titan is DirectX 11.1 compatible, and can easily run the latest PC games in resoutions of 2560 x 1600 and above.
ROG overclocking expert Andre Yang set the new 3DMark11 records using liquid nitrogen-cooled ASUS GeForce GTX Titan cards in a four-way NVIDIA SLI configuration with an ROG Rampage IV Extreme motherboard and an Intel Core i7-3970X processor. Additional information on these world records and the configurations used can be found here. The 3DMark Fire Strike world record was achieved by Andre Yang and fellow ROG team member and overclocker Shamino using two ASUS GeForce GTX Titan cards in NVIDIA SLI. This achievement also used an ROG Rampage IV Extreme motherboard and an Intel Core i7-3970X processor.About the ASUS GeForce GTX Titan
The ASUS GeForce GTX Titan has a dual-slot design with a full NVIDIA Kepler GPU - a GPU previously reserved for supercomputer applications. It features 2688 CUDA cores and a 384-bit memory interface for its 6GB GDDR5 video memory, clocked at 6000MHz. The ASUS GeForce GTX Titan is DirectX 11.1 compatible, and can easily run the latest PC games in resoutions of 2560 x 1600 and above.
23 Comments on ASUS GeForce GTX Titan Sets Four 3DMark World Records
I know all the professionals do the same to all the top cards but it's still a tad unrealistic. It'd be nice if the full customisation of the card was given out. You know, so we could all try it...not.
[/sad-sarcasm]
Whats wrong is having Andre and Kingpin on the same team...
here is the setup...
hwbot.org/submission/2371459
Titan power mods are a bit crazier as their vrms are pathetic...
They use additional boards of vrms to replace the stock ones...
For those who can't click a link....
cough person below me....
No you can't run your computer like this 24/7...
But you also probably can't redesign the voltage circuitry to enable such craziness as this...
But since you can't be impressed by redesigning hardware...
here h20 is in spot 2...
hwbot.org/submission/2371384_gunslinger_3dmark11___performance_4x_geforce_gtx_titan_35228_marks
Records are meant to be broken, for sure, but I'd like to see real users breaking them rather than guys with access to endless hardware.
What's different here, and what I applaud ASUS for, is directly stating that these guys are under their employment.
In the meantime I will go to Hwbot and check there. How is this misleading anyone? One can clearly see the mods done even with one eye...
One can also find how to do the power zombie mods and hard mods if your google foo is up to par. :rockout:
IMO part of the reason you may feel mislead is that the 'news thread' doesnt mention anything about how it was done outside of the cooling (there is a link though!). That said, its not really his responsibility either. One doesnt see a Honda Civic 1/4 mile time under 10 seconds and think its anywhere near stock either so a bit of a leap of faith(using your head) is needed too. ;)
That said I am competing in the current pro overclock cup against these guys. Keep in mind the guys got hired because they set world records on their own.
Proof:
www.xtremesystems.org/forums/showthread.php?256007-Andre-Yang-Lifetime-Ban
There's no pulling the wool over these here eyes, let me tell you. That episode is what had me leave the hardcore OC scene. What's the point in competing if others are cheating? that's why they have their own ranking now. I've got as high as 53rd in HWBOT long ago, check XS forums and you'll find tonnes of my benchmarks, post after post after post, me only. :p
Not saying htat is the case now, but bitter tastes fill my mouth on a regular basis when it comes to this type of OC.
Whats the point in doing reviews if people are pencil whipping them (there are a lot doing that..)? It has nothing to do with you. If you cant do it for fun, then I understand. Sorry that took the wind out of your sails, but I could give two shits what the top people are doing as even though I am recently into my own LN2, they dont bother me. I dunno, just me... I can see it being disheartening but I wont take my ball and go home over it, forever. :p
These guys do stuff no one else will, and it's awesome to see. We won't ever see you chopping off the VRM from a 7970 Matrix to feed Titan, now will we? ;)
But their scores should never have any part in any ranking, anywhere that the public can also join in on, and that's my opinion that will never change. I'm not saying I'm right here, that's just how I feel, and my feelings are based on real events. :p Futuremark needs a "manufacturer ranking" section.
wow... that's...sad.
I remember reading that but names don't always stick so well for me.
I have always been crazy into overclocking but not so much benchmarking.
Someone just happened to tip me off that I probably had a WR rig in my hands so I made it official. :D
Another note... Andre said he would be sitting this competition out... Given his past I guess I shouldn't be surprised.
And now for something completely different...
Coffee cups?
Oh, you didn't know? :p He's pretty open about that, honestly, posted in the "about" of his website. Just something that has come up recently in my little circle of daily people I talk to.
This is to computers like top fuel drag car or funny car as your standard computer is to a camry and notebook to a geo metro / honda civic. The only real world application this has is to show what is possible, when today's tech is pushed to the limits. And it is a way for friends to compete with one another in their shared field of interest.
And if you want to watch the benching, you can sometimes view it via livestream - but it will likely be very long and very boring
And most of the overclockers working for companies started out like anyone else. just tinkering around, it became a hobby, it turned into more than a hobby, companies were impressed enough with talent and ability to bring them on. Anyone has a chance to have something like that happen ;)
And for the time we've both spent watching I don't think it can really be THAT boring. I've been offered flights to Taipei on a couple of occasions now, so maybe you are right in that regard. And you've gotta prove yourself in order to get recognized. But I feel that OEMs need to get out of it so that more users get their chance in the light. And I'm not complaining because I want any of that....I think there are many users out there with some serious skills that just don't bother because of how things are.
And you are right, there's tonnes of prep and work that goes into this stuff.