Wednesday, January 14th 2009
NVIDIA Prepares GeForce 9600 GT Green Edition
NVIDIA is preparing to release soon a special edition of the GeForce 9600 GT card with lower power consumption. Code named GeForce 9600 GT Green Edition, it will be based on the new 55nm G94-350-B1 core and work with core voltage that is 0.1V lower than the current 55nm G94 cores. This suggests reduced power consumption, and from there the name - Green Edition. Other specs of this new card remain the same as on current 9600 GTs with 650MHz core speed and 900MHz memory clock. The Green GeForce 9600 GT will come with a new device ID 0x0624, and that's the only way to distinguish it from actual GeForce 9600 GT cards that have device ID 0x0622.
Source:
VR-Zone
20 Comments on NVIDIA Prepares GeForce 9600 GT Green Edition
I've stormed up some names for it too
- 9600GT Tweaker Edition
- 9600GT Overclockers Edition
- 9600GT ULV Edition
- 9600GT TTVM (Time to Volt Mod) Edition
- 9600GT Green Power is Faster Edition
I still didn't seen anyone concerned to have a green computer (romania) , nobody nobody i talked too when they bought a new computer/upgrade , the only problem concerning power was if the PSU will cope with a 4870x2 and overcloked quad core on some tuniq tower cooler , never about green.
Nvidia should lower the Vcore and Vmem on all cards if they truely want to save the planet.
I've found in many cases for stock clockspeeds that the default voltage exceeds what is needed; on several 8800GTs with voltage controls (I.e. gigabyte), with a reduction of voltage by 0.1v not affecting stability.
Same with vMem, the memory voltages are uneccessarily high. For overclockers maybe not, unless the memory is running too hot due to the high voltage (Qimonda).
In all dropping the voltages will put less stress on the whole card itself meaning the consumer and AIB partners will have less hassle, cheaper cards with only one or two phases will benefit most as the phases failing usually is the issue with such cards (i.e. G92/G94 based).
Its as simple as asking their OEMs to modify the bioses on their production line. This is simply just another one of those normal marketing ploys and nothing significant.
(How much would 0.1v save anyway?)
Low default voltage with user adjustable volts (like x1800/x190x0 series) then it's great. More green @ idle the better, but I want my gaming and OC to be as black as possible :)