REALLY... are people such stupid douchebags that they bring up 970!?
gee i didnt know JEDEC makes a compliance list or that segmented memory speed is anything close to electricity & failures or even fires
obviously we dont care about the sticker, what about someone with a lower end mobo? what about corporate IT support? what about an OEM? how about thinking of others for once
which reminds me, never called out the hysterical mob in the call of duty article months ago, sick of such people infesting what should be an intelligent empathetic enthusiast forum
System Name | msdos |
---|---|
Processor | 8086 |
Motherboard | mainboard |
Cooling | passive |
Memory | 640KB + 384KB extended |
Video Card(s) | EGA |
Storage | 5.25" |
Display(s) | 80x25 |
Case | plastic |
Audio Device(s) | modchip |
Power Supply | 45 watts |
Mouse | serial |
Keyboard | yes |
Software | disk commander |
Benchmark Scores | still running |
Processor | AMD Ryzen 7 3700X |
---|---|
Motherboard | MSI MAG B550 TOMAHAWK |
Cooling | AMD Wraith Prism |
Memory | Team Group Dark Pro 8Pack Edition 3600Mhz CL16 |
Video Card(s) | NVIDIA GeForce RTX 3080 FE |
Storage | Kingston A2000 1TB + Seagate HDD workhorse |
Display(s) | Samsung 50" QN94A Neo QLED |
Case | Antec 1200 |
Power Supply | Seasonic Focus GX-850 |
Mouse | Razer Deathadder Chroma |
Keyboard | Logitech UltraX |
Software | Windows 11 |
Yep the 3.5gb/4gb is working out just fine.Ahh the 970, aka the GM204, still giving 14nm Polaris a hard time... what a GPU.
System Name | msdos |
---|---|
Processor | 8086 |
Motherboard | mainboard |
Cooling | passive |
Memory | 640KB + 384KB extended |
Video Card(s) | EGA |
Storage | 5.25" |
Display(s) | 80x25 |
Case | plastic |
Audio Device(s) | modchip |
Power Supply | 45 watts |
Mouse | serial |
Keyboard | yes |
Software | disk commander |
Benchmark Scores | still running |
Processor | AMD Ryzen 7 3700X |
---|---|
Motherboard | MSI MAG B550 TOMAHAWK |
Cooling | AMD Wraith Prism |
Memory | Team Group Dark Pro 8Pack Edition 3600Mhz CL16 |
Video Card(s) | NVIDIA GeForce RTX 3080 FE |
Storage | Kingston A2000 1TB + Seagate HDD workhorse |
Display(s) | Samsung 50" QN94A Neo QLED |
Case | Antec 1200 |
Power Supply | Seasonic Focus GX-850 |
Mouse | Razer Deathadder Chroma |
Keyboard | Logitech UltraX |
Software | Windows 11 |
Yep the 3.5gb/4gb is working out just fine.
That's just it, it is! The card outsold everything for good reason too.
Processor | AMD Ryzen 7 3700X |
---|---|
Motherboard | MSI MAG B550 TOMAHAWK |
Cooling | AMD Wraith Prism |
Memory | Team Group Dark Pro 8Pack Edition 3600Mhz CL16 |
Video Card(s) | NVIDIA GeForce RTX 3080 FE |
Storage | Kingston A2000 1TB + Seagate HDD workhorse |
Display(s) | Samsung 50" QN94A Neo QLED |
Case | Antec 1200 |
Power Supply | Seasonic Focus GX-850 |
Mouse | Razer Deathadder Chroma |
Keyboard | Logitech UltraX |
Software | Windows 11 |
yes, ignorance is widespread. enjoy that 380x level performance in dx12
System Name | Z77 Rev. 1 |
---|---|
Processor | Intel Core i7 3770K |
Motherboard | ASRock Z77 Extreme4 |
Cooling | Water Cooling |
Memory | 2x G.Skill F3-2400C10D-16GTX |
Video Card(s) | EVGA GTX 1080 |
Storage | Samsung 850 Pro |
Display(s) | Samsung 28" UE590 UHD |
Case | Silverstone TJ07 |
Audio Device(s) | Onboard |
Power Supply | Seasonic PRIME 600W Titanium |
Mouse | EVGA TORQ X10 |
Keyboard | Leopold Tenkeyless |
Software | Windows 10 Pro 64-bit |
Benchmark Scores | 3DMark Time Spy: 7695 |
couldn't find anything confirming what you said. furthermore, i find this whole story a bit shady, i mean, first they have the rating then they dont.. its a load of bs if you ask me.
System Name | Ryzen/Laptop/htpc |
---|---|
Processor | R9 3900X/i7 6700HQ/i7 2600 |
Motherboard | AsRock X470 Taichi/Acer/ Gigabyte H77M |
Cooling | Corsair H115i pro with 2 Noctua NF-A14 chromax/OEM/Noctua NH-L12i |
Memory | G.Skill Trident Z 32GB @3200/16GB DDR4 2666 HyperX impact/24GB |
Video Card(s) | TUL Red Dragon Vega 56/Intel HD 530 - GTX 950m/ 970 GTX |
Storage | 970pro NVMe 512GB,Samsung 860evo 1TB, 3x4TB WD gold/Transcend 830s, 1TB Toshiba/Adata 256GB + 1TB WD |
Display(s) | Philips FTV 32 inch + Dell 2407WFP-HC/OEM/Sony KDL-42W828B |
Case | Phanteks Enthoo Luxe/Acer Barebone/Enermax |
Audio Device(s) | SoundBlasterX AE-5 (Dell A525)(HyperX Cloud Alpha)/mojo/soundblaster xfi gamer |
Power Supply | Seasonic focus+ 850 platinum (SSR-850PX)/165 Watt power brick/Enermax 650W |
Mouse | G502 Hero/M705 Marathon/G305 Hero Lightspeed |
Keyboard | G19/oem/Steelseries Apex 300 |
Software | Win10 pro 64bit |
i got that. that wasn't my point, i just couldn't find the standard's specs on the net, and my point was, why give the compliance in the first place and then take it away? that looks shady to me and totally unprofessional. also how can spikes to 200+ watts be ok for the spec but 10 watts of continuous power be harmful? im not an electrical engineer, but i find the lack of clear info on the subject not to my liking.RMS is the industry standard. Every multimeter on the planet tries their hardest to indicate true RMS power. Only the crappiest multimeters measure RMS slightlg wrong and only the most advanced and expensive multimeters give you the option to disable RMS and view the peaks or lows if someone ever needs that functionality for their particular serious research purposes. But, like I said, every power meter and multimeter on the planet indicates RMS power by default and that is the standard which every electrical standard on the planet observes.
It is only armchair youtube viewers who think that some site's video about their method of hooking up a random and un-scientific amount of filtering indicates something about anything meaningful. If anything, they should have used Toms' graph of realtime data and applied RMS to Toms' realtime data to arrive at pretty close to the correct values instead of throwing some random coils into their experiment and skewing the data by an unknown and arbitrary amount without paying any attention to the lowpass or highpass filtering implications and inaccuracies introduced into their data due to an input signal of unknown frequency and randomness and then trying to explain it in a way which sounded enlightened. Neither site got it quite right. But that is besides the point.
The point is that PCI-SIG used the industry standard RMS power when it developes and publishes its industry standard. Thus they do indeed level off the peaks into a more true indication of average power consumption and heat production over extended use and load and do indeed place less importance on any individual power spike. It is similar (in a way) to what PCper tried to do, but in a much more scientific and reproduceable way which does not change drastically depending on your power supply's output ripple frequency or your game's/application's load and computation distribution.
System Name | Home Brewed |
---|---|
Processor | i9-7900X and i7-8700K |
Motherboard | ASUS ROG Rampage VI Extreme & ASUS Prime Z-370 A |
Cooling | Corsair 280mm AIO & Thermaltake Water 3.0 |
Memory | 64GB DDR4-3000 GSKill RipJaws-V & 32GB DDR4-3466 GEIL Potenza |
Video Card(s) | 2X-GTX-1080 SLI & 2 GTX-1070Ti 8GB G1 Gaming in SLI |
Storage | Both have 2TB HDDs for storage, 480GB SSDs for OS, and 240GB SSDs for Steam Games |
Display(s) | ACER 28" B286HK 4K & Samsung 32" 1080P |
Case | NZXT Source 540 & Rosewill Rise Chassis |
Audio Device(s) | onboard |
Power Supply | Corsair RM1000 & Corsair RM850 |
Mouse | Generic |
Keyboard | Razer Blackwidow Tournament & Corsair K90 |
Software | Win-10 Professional |
Benchmark Scores | yes |
. I won't be buying a card that could possibly overdraw power from my system.I think the funny part is how the reference RX480 got the certification in the first place, since it was not compliant with the requirements.