Wednesday, October 3rd 2007
NVIDIA GeForce 8800GT Pictured
Updated: NVIDIA GeForce 8800GT Pictured
NVIDIA's latest GeForce 8800GT (G92) video card will be clocked at 600MHz core and 1.8GHz memory, and will feature single slot cooling, at least according to the leaked picture. The reference 3DMark06 score provided by NVIDIA is 10769 marks. The launch date is said to be brought forward to October 29th.
Sources:
VR-Zone, mobile1
NVIDIA's latest GeForce 8800GT (G92) video card will be clocked at 600MHz core and 1.8GHz memory, and will feature single slot cooling, at least according to the leaked picture. The reference 3DMark06 score provided by NVIDIA is 10769 marks. The launch date is said to be brought forward to October 29th.
50 Comments on NVIDIA GeForce 8800GT Pictured
theyve obviously tested the card to within its 'safety' levels but i still wouldnt want hot air being blasted around n around in my case so good case ventillation is a must with this card
The 7800GTX 512MB needed this monster to keep it cool at 550MHz with little overclock room, while the 7900GT only needed this to keep it cool at 550MHz with overclock room.
Too bad it's going to have to come off and be replaced with my HR-03 Plus.
Thats odd I had three 7800GTX 256mb back when they were the performance king (two gainward GS and one Leadtek generic non overclocked model) and all three could hit 530 on the core and 1350 on the memory without any issues what so ever.
In fact the leadtek could hit 550/1400 without any hiccups all with stock cooling. (stock volts)
They also did not run that hot at least no worse than current high end cards with mammoth coolers.
I guess "no headroom" was a minor exageration, but compared to the 600/800 I got on the 7900GTs it was a relative statement I was making.
The idea is that in performance terms, the 256MB card will sit between the 8600GTS and 320MB 8800GTS (it sounds like the 8600GTS will be binned, keeping the 8600GT but dropping the price a bit to compete with the 2600XT/pro better )and the 512MB version will sit between the 320 and 640MB 8800GTS loosely, of course as I said, LOTS of speculation here. The card should only have a single 6 pin PCI-E power connector but will draw very little from it as the 75W from the motherboard PCI-E socket should provide three quarters of it's power requirement.
All in all then, at stock speeds around and about direct competition for the 2950 I would guess. Further speculation is that it will overclock like mad with so much spare capacity on tap and that if NVidia really wanted to, they could increase the stock core clock by 100mhz and it still would not break into a sweat.
I got all this from 3 different sites that basically said a bit each of what I put here, the most useful of those 3 sites was Guru3D and the OIA.
so my point would be that its 60-75'c 'WITH' the dual slot cooler. & thats still pretty hot! specially if your going to be gaming for a good few hours (my X1800XT got a lot hotter on its stock cooling) so if thats the temperatures of the Dual Slot cooler. i dont think i even need to guess or mention what the temps are going to be like with this single slot solution.
just because its had its dye shrinked doesnt mean that it wont produce any heat, & if you cut down the cooler that doesnt magically make the card run cooler unless you got a mini air con unit in your case then fair enough but I doubt anyone has
And example of this can be seen in the CPU market. Look at the Pentium 4 660 and 661. They are literally identical processor, but one is 90nm and the other is 65nm. The 90nm 660 has a TDP of 115w, while the 65nm 661 has a TDP of 86w.
ROP count x GPU Clock = Real power.
Used car dealer: Yeah, this 1988 Ford Escort has 225790 miles on it, and transmission is near death, and most of the undercarriage has rusted away. But it has a leather interior! (leather interior = stream processors)
www.reghardware.co.uk/2006/11/16/review_geforce_8800_gts/