• Welcome to TechPowerUp Forums, Guest! Please check out our forum guidelines for info related to our community.

NVIDIA GeForce RTX Ampere Chips Feature Three Binning Tiers, Mostly Good Dies are Present

Joined
May 15, 2020
Messages
697 (0.42/day)
Location
France
System Name Home
Processor Ryzen 3600X
Motherboard MSI Tomahawk 450 MAX
Cooling Noctua NH-U14S
Memory 16GB Crucial Ballistix 3600 MHz DDR4 CAS 16
Video Card(s) MSI RX 5700XT EVOKE OC
Storage Samsung 970 PRO 512 GB
Display(s) ASUS VA326HR + MSI Optix G24C4
Case MSI - MAG Forge 100M
Power Supply Aerocool Lux RGB M 650W
Interesting write up, but what is ignored here is that Samsung is not giving Nvidia all the chips, it's giving them only the good ones (which is an unusual deal, but hey, samsung must've wanted this badly) , because they have a special deal going on.

As such, it's impossible to evaluate how good are the yields at Samsung, because we don't know how many chips they throw away.

However, the one thing that we could infer is that most of the cards will make good overclockers/undervolters (which admitedly was already known/laked a long time ago) if the AIB or individuals are willing to cope with the high TDP's.

For those of us looking at these cards, this Samsung 8nm process is making me a bit nervous compared to TSMC 7nm...
Why is that, it seems 70% of the chips are more than OK? Those who are OK can still run as is written on the box, so this is a great deal for Nvidia.
 
Joined
Mar 10, 2010
Messages
11,878 (2.21/day)
Location
Manchester uk
System Name RyzenGtEvo/ Asus strix scar II
Processor Amd R5 5900X/ Intel 8750H
Motherboard Crosshair hero8 impact/Asus
Cooling 360EK extreme rad+ 360$EK slim all push, cpu ek suprim Gpu full cover all EK
Memory Corsair Vengeance Rgb pro 3600cas14 16Gb in four sticks./16Gb/16GB
Video Card(s) Powercolour RX7900XT Reference/Rtx 2060
Storage Silicon power 2TB nvme/8Tb external/1Tb samsung Evo nvme 2Tb sata ssd/1Tb nvme
Display(s) Samsung UAE28"850R 4k freesync.dell shiter
Case Lianli 011 dynamic/strix scar2
Audio Device(s) Xfi creative 7.1 on board ,Yamaha dts av setup, corsair void pro headset
Power Supply corsair 1200Hxi/Asus stock
Mouse Roccat Kova/ Logitech G wireless
Keyboard Roccat Aimo 120
VR HMD Oculus rift
Software Win 10 Pro
Benchmark Scores 8726 vega 3dmark timespy/ laptop Timespy 6506
so 30% bin 0= FE
60% bin 1= AIB stock speeds+ min. OC
10% bin2 = high OC version

???
What no the opposite from history top bin 0 goes to Fe everyone else gets what's left.

Soooooooo small run ,new node, big chip's 4 bins ,3 !good! 1 bad.

Sounding like a great paper launch this one.
 
Joined
Jun 18, 2015
Messages
575 (0.17/day)
Bin 0 = over the announced price = overpriced 1600~1700$
Bin 1 = way overpriced 1700~1800$
Bin 2 = exaggeratedly overpriced ~2000$
 
Last edited:
Joined
Nov 4, 2015
Messages
196 (0.06/day)
Location
Dutchland
Processor Ryzen 3600x
Motherboard MPG B550 GAMING PLUS
Cooling Gamdias AIO 3x
Memory 32768 MB Corsair 8192 MB (DDR4-3200)
Video Card(s) RX 6750 XT (RTX 2060)
Storage Samsung SSD 990 PRO 1TB/Samsung SSD 970 EVO 500GB
Display(s) 2x AOC 27G2G8 (AOC2702) 27.2 inches (69.1 cm) / 1920 x 1080 pixels @ 48-240 (curved)
Mouse No idea brand
Keyboard Same as above
Software Win11 Pro
Last edited:
Joined
May 30, 2018
Messages
1,890 (0.80/day)
Location
Cusp Of Mania, FL
Processor Ryzen 9 3900X
Motherboard Asus ROG Strix X370-F
Cooling Dark Rock 4, 3x Corsair ML140 front intake, 1x rear exhaust
Memory 2x8GB TridentZ RGB [3600Mhz CL16]
Video Card(s) EVGA 3060ti FTW3 Ultra Gaming
Storage 970 EVO 500GB nvme, 860 EVO 250GB SATA, Seagate Barracuda 1TB + 4TB HDDs
Display(s) 27" MSI G27C4 FHD 165hz
Case NZXT H710
Audio Device(s) Modi Multibit, Vali 2, Shortest Way 51+ - LSR 305's, Focal Clear, HD6xx, HE5xx, LCD-2 Classic
Power Supply Corsair RM650x v2
Mouse iunno whatever cheap crap logitech *clutches Xbox 360 controller security blanket*
Keyboard HyperX Alloy Pro
Software Windows 10 Pro
Benchmark Scores ask your mother
Water. It's still wet.
...but according to the internet, that in itself is a topic of intense debate! Its like, a microcosm of all speculative discussion online. Some say water is implicitly wet at all times. Others say wetness cannot be a property of water but instead only exists as an attribute of objects that have a sufficient amount of water on them.

Arent you glad we can have these illuminating conversations on this ever expanding highway of information and ideas? Stuff like this... we're redefining mankind as we speak. Discussions for the ages.
 
Joined
Sep 11, 2020
Messages
4 (0.00/day)
"The production period was quite short..."

That is the only thing of consequence in the OP, and it isn't good for ANYONE - as opposed to the 10% statement affecting just those that want the "rare" top-tier cards. It would seem to indicate that Supply and Demand is gonna suck for consumers for longer than usual. :( I have no problem waiting though, as I am fortunate enough to be sitting pretty with a very nice gaming computer[(liquid-cooled 3900X/2080 Super (both of which have nicely undervolted and overclocked), fast NVMe drive, etc] and a bunch of other tech stuff that I got for free. :D I'm actually planning on selling everything but the computer: Vertigear gaming chair, Lexmark cx331 color laser multifunction machine, and Dell: Latitude 7400, Thunderbolt dock, and last but certainly not least a 34" Curved Ultrasharp monitor (which I successfully tested at an overclocked 75Hz). With the proceeds from that stuff I hope to be able to purchase a very nice monitor (I would love a Samsung G9 if they get the flickering fixed and start producing it again) and an RTX3080 . . . or something better should AMD impress with their release.
 
Joined
Feb 26, 2016
Messages
551 (0.17/day)
Location
Texas
System Name O-Clock
Processor Intel Core i9-9900K @ 52x/49x 8c8t
Motherboard ASUS Maximus XI Gene
Cooling EK Quantum Velocity C+A, EK Quantum Vector C+A, CE 280, Monsta 280, GTS 280 all w/ A14 IP67
Memory 2x16GB G.Skill TridentZ @3900 MHz CL16
Video Card(s) EVGA RTX 2080 Ti XC Black
Storage Samsung 983 ZET 960GB, 2x WD SN850X 4TB
Display(s) Asus VG259QM
Case Corsair 900D
Audio Device(s) beyerdynamic DT 990 600Ω, Asus SupremeFX Hi-Fi 5.25", Elgato Wave 3
Power Supply EVGA 1600 T2 w/ A14 IP67
Mouse Logitech G403 Wireless (PMW3366)
Keyboard Monsgeek M5W w/ Cherry MX Silent Black RGBs
Software Windows 10 Pro 64 bit
Benchmark Scores https://hwbot.org/search/submissions/permalink?userId=92615&cpuId=5773
This is very little useful information.
- Which die are we talking about?
- What exactly do tiers represent - is Tier 0 something like Turing's non-oc cores that run at or slightly above spec?
- There is no comparison with binning results of some other die or some other manufacturing process.

Reread the article. It is VERY useful.

  1. The article states Ampere chips, referring primarily to GA104 and GA102 (for now). It is unlikely they are talking about GA100 because that has already been out for a while and is not in this segment.
  2. Tiers are already explained in the article, yes T0 is the ones that, at minimum, meet the specifications. Considering how silicon lottery plays, there will be some chips (actually a majority of these) that will exceed the binning spec for T0, but not enough to make it to T1, so yes, it is very likely you will have some overclocking leeway with T0, but don't expect something crazy from those. With the numbers given, you have a 3:6:1 ratio of T0:T1:T2. Which indirectly means, NVIDIA actually could have raised the specifications of the 30 series, because they have way more T1 chips than T0 chips, but they are playing it safe to get an extra 43% yield (30/70). What is likely to happen is, you will see more than half the cards (70% based on these numbers) will be able to overclock past NVIDIA's spec, and since there are a lot of T1 chips, it is likely those will be at MSRP +-10%. I expect a majority of T0 chips to be on the graphics cards that will be sold below MSRP levels. T2 GA104 chips may be reserved for the future GA104 graphics cards that enable more cores, because they are a top bin. In total, 60% will be T1, 30% will be T0, and 10% T2. When compared to T2, there are 3x as many T0 and 6x as many T1 chips. When compared to T0, there are 2x as many T1 and 0.33x as many T2 chips. When compared to T1, there are 0.5x as many T0, and 0.17x as many T2 chips. Make of that what you will.
  3. Why would NVIDIA (or even Intel or AMD) want to tell you their binning results? They make the specifications for those chips, they don't want warranty claims, which if they do make public about their binning results, then people will start claiming warranty because it "doesn't meet the binned specifications". That is primarily why most companies do not tell you the binned specs, rather the specs of what the minimum in a set can handle. For AIBs, they put their own specs of what expect a majority of graphics cards in a set can handle. There is still some bad apples, and those can be RMA'd. A company like Silicon Lottery is the kind of company that will tell you the more exact binned specs, though they only do CPUs.

Bin 0 = over the announced price = overpriced 1600~1700$
Bin 1 = way overpriced 1700~1800$
Bin 2 = exaggeratedly overpriced ~2000$
I would expect something more like this:
  1. T0 = 1300-1400$
  2. T1 = 1500-1800$
  3. T2 = 1900$+
Remember, NVIDIA's FE cards are likely to have T1 chips, as they have a lot of them. Sooooo, it is also likely that the bare minimum spec chips will be put in graphics cards priced under MSRP, by about 10%, in addition to a weaker but cheaper cooling solution (such as blower).

How is this news
It provides a rare insight into the binning process at the factory level, which is actually quite informative of expected overclocking performance.
 
Last edited:
Joined
Aug 20, 2007
Messages
21,471 (3.40/day)
System Name Pioneer
Processor Ryzen R9 9950X
Motherboard GIGABYTE Aorus Elite X670 AX
Cooling Noctua NH-D15 + A whole lotta Sunon and Corsair Maglev blower fans...
Memory 64GB (4x 16GB) G.Skill Flare X5 @ DDR5-6000 CL30
Video Card(s) XFX RX 7900 XTX Speedster Merc 310
Storage Intel 905p Optane 960GB boot, +2x Crucial P5 Plus 2TB PCIe 4.0 NVMe SSDs
Display(s) 55" LG 55" B9 OLED 4K Display
Case Thermaltake Core X31
Audio Device(s) TOSLINK->Schiit Modi MB->Asgard 2 DAC Amp->AKG Pro K712 Headphones or HDMI->B9 OLED
Power Supply FSP Hydro Ti Pro 850W
Mouse Logitech G305 Lightspeed Wireless
Keyboard WASD Code v3 with Cherry Green keyswitches + PBT DS keycaps
Software Gentoo Linux x64 / Windows 11 Enterprise IoT 2024
Where could we have seen this? 3... 2... 1...

You guys act like the process node is going to make a difference vs AMD's historic incompetence with energy consumption. I doubt it will, frankly.

How is this news

Because it is? Some of us care?

Go educate yourself , read some reviews check some facts them come to talk me later about BS !

Because Ampere reviews are everywhere just now.

People, can we turn down the brand war just a bit? Please?
 
Joined
Jul 16, 2014
Messages
8,198 (2.16/day)
Location
SE Michigan
System Name Dumbass
Processor AMD Ryzen 7800X3D
Motherboard ASUS TUF gaming B650
Cooling Artic Liquid Freezer 2 - 420mm
Memory G.Skill Sniper 32gb DDR5 6000
Video Card(s) GreenTeam 4070 ti super 16gb
Storage Samsung EVO 500gb & 1Tb, 2tb HDD, 500gb WD Black
Display(s) 1x Nixeus NX_EDG27, 2x Dell S2440L (16:9)
Case Phanteks Enthoo Primo w/8 140mm SP Fans
Audio Device(s) onboard (realtek?) - SPKRS:Logitech Z623 200w 2.1
Power Supply Corsair HX1000i
Mouse Steeseries Esports Wireless
Keyboard Corsair K100
Software windows 10 H
Benchmark Scores https://i.imgur.com/aoz3vWY.jpg?2
Joined
Sep 17, 2014
Messages
22,461 (6.03/day)
Location
The Washing Machine
Processor 7800X3D
Motherboard MSI MAG Mortar b650m wifi
Cooling Thermalright Peerless Assassin
Memory 32GB Corsair Vengeance 30CL6000
Video Card(s) ASRock RX7900XT Phantom Gaming
Storage Lexar NM790 4TB + Samsung 850 EVO 1TB + Samsung 980 1TB + Crucial BX100 250GB
Display(s) Gigabyte G34QWC (3440x1440)
Case Lian Li A3 mATX White
Audio Device(s) Harman Kardon AVR137 + 2.1
Power Supply EVGA Supernova G2 750W
Mouse Steelseries Aerox 5
Keyboard Lenovo Thinkpad Trackpoint II
Software W11 IoT Enterprise LTSC
Benchmark Scores Over 9000
Go educate yourself , read some reviews check some facts them come to talk me later about BS !
Non FEs also performed stellar? Yes, on air, and if they were the A chip, they were good on water too. I've never stated otherwise. Although the FE cards had a higher change of getting the A chip, especially considering that they cost as much as the cheapest AIB cards that were virtually guaranteed to be the non-a chips.
The non-a had a 280W power limit even with BIOS modding, while the A chips could go upto 380W with BIOS modding. That's another 100W of headroom for overclocking, which was huge for watercooling. If we're talking air, it's not relevant as you'll face thermal restraints way before power, but for those of us who put them under water the A chips were definitely worth the premium, and thus the FE cards were a good bet as they were cheap and virtually guaranteed to be the A chip.


Because they performed better out of the box as they had the superior A chip?

'Educate yourself' is not a source, boys. Try to find one. I challenge you to find an FE bench that scores higher than an equal open air AIB card at the same TDP.

Don't parrot marketing. Investigate. What you can do with mods and water is irrelevant. This is about what these cards are sold as. Since Kepler, I haven't seen a SINGLE FE / NVTTM card bench better than a non-FE. In fact, all FE's have throttled until Turing, and Turing's FE's had a markup and were the first open air versions and also carried higher TDPs than the equivalents from AIBs.

Even so, an MSI Trio still scores better than a Turing FE. Consistently.

Enjoy finding those sources for me. And note, a reviewer saying the same as you doesn't count. Numbers or its all nonsense.

Note that 1-2 FPS gaps don't count, because you've got that additional TDP. This does not prove you have a better bin, might even be contrary ;)

And of course they are selling them with the same price, regardless of this "bin" thing ...

This procedure is well known, always has been like this.

Thank you. And there is no reason to start caring now. The overall performance spread is so low, this is marketing more than anything else. Create a 'need' where there isn't one, and look at us... (well, not me).
 
Last edited:
Joined
Jun 3, 2010
Messages
2,540 (0.48/day)
You guys act like the process node is going to make a difference vs AMD's historic incompetence with energy consumption. I doubt it will, frankly.
Thanks for the company, dude. I couldn't live with myself without some juicy green team red team beef, although I got no 'steak' in the discussion.
I don't post these things just because I don't like Samsung, it is to spite you wonderful gentlemen with incendiary comments. Because it is not about Samsung's process, but irrational teamster preferences.
I better take my opinion, elsewhere... nobody can see without their colored goggles here.
 
Joined
Feb 3, 2017
Messages
3,757 (1.32/day)
Processor Ryzen 7800X3D
Motherboard ROG STRIX B650E-F GAMING WIFI
Memory 2x16GB G.Skill Flare X5 DDR5-6000 CL36 (F5-6000J3636F16GX2-FX5)
Video Card(s) INNO3D GeForce RTX™ 4070 Ti SUPER TWIN X2
Storage 2TB Samsung 980 PRO, 4TB WD Black SN850X
Display(s) 42" LG C2 OLED, 27" ASUS PG279Q
Case Thermaltake Core P5
Power Supply Fractal Design Ion+ Platinum 760W
Mouse Corsair Dark Core RGB Pro SE
Keyboard Corsair K100 RGB
VR HMD HTC Vive Cosmos
Reread the article. It is VERY useful.

  1. The article states Ampere chips, referring primarily to GA104 and GA102 (for now). It is unlikely they are talking about GA100 because that has already been out for a while and is not in this segment.
  2. Tiers are already explained in the article, yes T0 is the ones that, at minimum, meet the specifications. Considering how silicon lottery plays, there will be some chips (actually a majority of these) that will exceed the binning spec for T0, but not enough to make it to T1, so yes, it is very likely you will have some overclocking leeway with T0, but don't expect something crazy from those. With the numbers given, you have a 3:6:1 ratio of T0:T1:T2. Which indirectly means, NVIDIA actually could have raised the specifications of the 30 series, because they have way more T1 chips than T0 chips, but they are playing it safe to get an extra 43% yield (30/70). What is likely to happen is, you will see more than half the cards (70% based on these numbers) will be able to overclock past NVIDIA's spec, and since there are a lot of T1 chips, it is likely those will be at MSRP +-10%. I expect a majority of T0 chips to be on the graphics cards that will be sold below MSRP levels. T2 GA104 chips may be reserved for the future GA104 graphics cards that enable more cores, because they are a top bin. In total, 60% will be T1, 30% will be T0, and 10% T2. When compared to T2, there are 3x as many T0 and 6x as many T1 chips. When compared to T0, there are 2x as many T1 and 0.33x as many T2 chips. When compared to T1, there are 0.5x as many T0, and 0.17x as many T2 chips. Make of that what you will.
  3. Why would NVIDIA (or even Intel or AMD) want to tell you their binning results? They make the specifications for those chips, they don't want warranty claims, which if they do make public about their binning results, then people will start claiming warranty because it "doesn't meet the binned specifications". That is primarily why most companies do not tell you the binned specs, rather the specs of what the minimum in a set can handle. For AIBs, they put their own specs of what expect a majority of graphics cards in a set can handle. There is still some bad apples, and those can be RMA'd. A company like Silicon Lottery is the kind of company that will tell you the more exact binned specs, though they only do CPUs.
- GA102 and GA104 are quite different, most importantly 628mm² vs 395mm² on a pretty unknown manufacturing process. Bunching them up together makes no sense. Or, alternatively if it makes sense then Samsung's 8N process is absolutely excellent if yields are similar for both dies, one being almost 60% bigger than the other and close enough to the reticle limit.
- OK, Good, Best is absolutely pointless division unless we know what each means and we do not. We do not have a single clue. Are they 2% apart? 10%? Are they binned for speed or efficiency? Are they binned for functional units? Something else? The rest is fairly baseless conjecture.
- Binned specifications have no relevance on product specifications and if they did reveal binned specs publicly they would be in full right to point at product specs and say - it achieves that. End of story.
 

dink

New Member
Joined
Sep 12, 2020
Messages
1 (0.00/day)
'Educate yourself' is not a source, boys. Try to find one. I challenge you to find an FE bench that scores higher than an equal open air AIB card at the same TDP.

Don't parrot marketing. Investigate. What you can do with mods and water is irrelevant. This is about what these cards are sold as. Since Kepler, I haven't seen a SINGLE FE / NVTTM card bench better than a non-FE. In fact, all FE's have throttled until Turing, and Turing's FE's had a markup and were the first open air versions and also carried higher TDPs than the equivalents from AIBs.

Even so, an MSI Trio still scores better than a Turing FE. Consistently.

Enjoy finding those sources for me. And note, a reviewer saying the same as you doesn't count. Numbers or its all nonsense.

Note that 1-2 FPS gaps don't count, because you've got that additional TDP. This does not prove you have a better bin, might even be contrary ;)



Thank you. And there is no reason to start caring now. The overall performance spread is so low, this is marketing more than anything else. Create a 'need' where there isn't one, and look at us... (well, not me).

It has been common knowledge among extreme OC crowds and bench score ninjas that the FE series are the best at release. Later in the lifecycle it doesn't matter as much. If that trend continues is speculation, but why do you care anyways? You clearly aren't in those circles.
 
Joined
Feb 26, 2016
Messages
551 (0.17/day)
Location
Texas
System Name O-Clock
Processor Intel Core i9-9900K @ 52x/49x 8c8t
Motherboard ASUS Maximus XI Gene
Cooling EK Quantum Velocity C+A, EK Quantum Vector C+A, CE 280, Monsta 280, GTS 280 all w/ A14 IP67
Memory 2x16GB G.Skill TridentZ @3900 MHz CL16
Video Card(s) EVGA RTX 2080 Ti XC Black
Storage Samsung 983 ZET 960GB, 2x WD SN850X 4TB
Display(s) Asus VG259QM
Case Corsair 900D
Audio Device(s) beyerdynamic DT 990 600Ω, Asus SupremeFX Hi-Fi 5.25", Elgato Wave 3
Power Supply EVGA 1600 T2 w/ A14 IP67
Mouse Logitech G403 Wireless (PMW3366)
Keyboard Monsgeek M5W w/ Cherry MX Silent Black RGBs
Software Windows 10 Pro 64 bit
Benchmark Scores https://hwbot.org/search/submissions/permalink?userId=92615&cpuId=5773
- GA102 and GA104 are quite different, most importantly 628mm² vs 395mm² on a pretty unknown manufacturing process. Bunching them up together makes no sense. Or, alternatively if it makes sense then Samsung's 8N process is absolutely excellent if yields are similar for both dies, one being almost 60% bigger than the other and close enough to the reticle limit.
- OK, Good, Best is absolutely pointless division unless we know what each means and we do not. We do not have a single clue. Are they 2% apart? 10%? Are they binned for speed or efficiency? Are they binned for functional units? Something else? The rest is fairly baseless conjecture.
- Binned specifications have no relevance on product specifications and if they did reveal binned specs publicly they would be in full right to point at product specs and say - it achieves that. End of story.
Dude, not even a lot of professional overclockers know exactly how well CPUs and GPUs are binned from the factory. TBH, you are expecting way too much. As for the manufacturing process, I don't know, it's kind of like techpowerup has it in their own GPU databases that they use Samsung 8nm, it's also kind of like NVIDIA actually stated that in their own 30 series announcements. At this point, I think you are just trolling, so I will stop replying to you.
 
Joined
Feb 3, 2017
Messages
3,757 (1.32/day)
Processor Ryzen 7800X3D
Motherboard ROG STRIX B650E-F GAMING WIFI
Memory 2x16GB G.Skill Flare X5 DDR5-6000 CL36 (F5-6000J3636F16GX2-FX5)
Video Card(s) INNO3D GeForce RTX™ 4070 Ti SUPER TWIN X2
Storage 2TB Samsung 980 PRO, 4TB WD Black SN850X
Display(s) 42" LG C2 OLED, 27" ASUS PG279Q
Case Thermaltake Core P5
Power Supply Fractal Design Ion+ Platinum 760W
Mouse Corsair Dark Core RGB Pro SE
Keyboard Corsair K100 RGB
VR HMD HTC Vive Cosmos
Dude, not even a lot of professional overclockers know exactly how well CPUs and GPUs are binned from the factory. TBH, you are expecting way too much. As for the manufacturing process, I don't know, it's kind of like techpowerup has it in their own GPU databases that they use Samsung 8nm, it's also kind of like NVIDIA actually stated that in their own 30 series announcements. At this point, I think you are just trolling, so I will stop replying to you.
That was my entire point that this story yields very little useful information. If any.
I have no idea what you mean by talk about manufacturing process here.

Edit:
OK, I am note sure what or how exactly but you read my manufacturing process comment somehow completely wrong.

Samsung 8N or 8nm or even 10nm are very much unknown quantities when we are talking about big dies and desktop hardware. 8nm and 10nm have been used primarily by mobile SoCs. This means both low power and smaller dies (probably in the range of maybe 150mm²). There are no data points we know about nowhere near the 300W and 400/600mm² targets that are Ampere dies.
 
Last edited:
Joined
Aug 20, 2007
Messages
21,471 (3.40/day)
System Name Pioneer
Processor Ryzen R9 9950X
Motherboard GIGABYTE Aorus Elite X670 AX
Cooling Noctua NH-D15 + A whole lotta Sunon and Corsair Maglev blower fans...
Memory 64GB (4x 16GB) G.Skill Flare X5 @ DDR5-6000 CL30
Video Card(s) XFX RX 7900 XTX Speedster Merc 310
Storage Intel 905p Optane 960GB boot, +2x Crucial P5 Plus 2TB PCIe 4.0 NVMe SSDs
Display(s) 55" LG 55" B9 OLED 4K Display
Case Thermaltake Core X31
Audio Device(s) TOSLINK->Schiit Modi MB->Asgard 2 DAC Amp->AKG Pro K712 Headphones or HDMI->B9 OLED
Power Supply FSP Hydro Ti Pro 850W
Mouse Logitech G305 Lightspeed Wireless
Keyboard WASD Code v3 with Cherry Green keyswitches + PBT DS keycaps
Software Gentoo Linux x64 / Windows 11 Enterprise IoT 2024
it is to spite you wonderful gentlemen with incendiary comments

My comment was not intended as incendiary, but thanks. I'm just looking at the numbers.
 
Joined
Jun 3, 2010
Messages
2,540 (0.48/day)
My comment was not intended as incendiary, but thanks. I'm just looking at the numbers.
Well, opinions are quantitative now?
You guys are giving me the nosebleeds.
I don't mind fans and giggles from time to time, but maybe we should leave facts do the speaking.
PS: I wasn't speaking for yourself, I was acting ironic as usual. You guys should know astroturfing is my fine honed art.
 
Joined
Aug 20, 2007
Messages
21,471 (3.40/day)
System Name Pioneer
Processor Ryzen R9 9950X
Motherboard GIGABYTE Aorus Elite X670 AX
Cooling Noctua NH-D15 + A whole lotta Sunon and Corsair Maglev blower fans...
Memory 64GB (4x 16GB) G.Skill Flare X5 @ DDR5-6000 CL30
Video Card(s) XFX RX 7900 XTX Speedster Merc 310
Storage Intel 905p Optane 960GB boot, +2x Crucial P5 Plus 2TB PCIe 4.0 NVMe SSDs
Display(s) 55" LG 55" B9 OLED 4K Display
Case Thermaltake Core X31
Audio Device(s) TOSLINK->Schiit Modi MB->Asgard 2 DAC Amp->AKG Pro K712 Headphones or HDMI->B9 OLED
Power Supply FSP Hydro Ti Pro 850W
Mouse Logitech G305 Lightspeed Wireless
Keyboard WASD Code v3 with Cherry Green keyswitches + PBT DS keycaps
Software Gentoo Linux x64 / Windows 11 Enterprise IoT 2024
Joined
Jun 3, 2010
Messages
2,540 (0.48/day)
No, but watts are.
Funny you would go there. Samsung isn't your bread and butter foundry. Expect a few hiccups.

If we continue, I'll have to resort to Mortal Kombat jokes;
- "You are still trying to win?"
Let's not go there pal, I've never missed my common troll courtesy.
 
Joined
Aug 20, 2007
Messages
21,471 (3.40/day)
System Name Pioneer
Processor Ryzen R9 9950X
Motherboard GIGABYTE Aorus Elite X670 AX
Cooling Noctua NH-D15 + A whole lotta Sunon and Corsair Maglev blower fans...
Memory 64GB (4x 16GB) G.Skill Flare X5 @ DDR5-6000 CL30
Video Card(s) XFX RX 7900 XTX Speedster Merc 310
Storage Intel 905p Optane 960GB boot, +2x Crucial P5 Plus 2TB PCIe 4.0 NVMe SSDs
Display(s) 55" LG 55" B9 OLED 4K Display
Case Thermaltake Core X31
Audio Device(s) TOSLINK->Schiit Modi MB->Asgard 2 DAC Amp->AKG Pro K712 Headphones or HDMI->B9 OLED
Power Supply FSP Hydro Ti Pro 850W
Mouse Logitech G305 Lightspeed Wireless
Keyboard WASD Code v3 with Cherry Green keyswitches + PBT DS keycaps
Software Gentoo Linux x64 / Windows 11 Enterprise IoT 2024
You assume I am trolling. I'm not. You'll end up playing with yourself.

I just can't see the watts on Samsung 7nm being worse than Turing, which is about what it'd need to matter I think.
 
Joined
Jun 3, 2010
Messages
2,540 (0.48/day)
I just can't see the watts on Samsung 7nm being worse than Turing
Hmm, never thought it that way. It is quite an uncommon way of thinking. Turing is neither the competition, nor made at the same foundry, but hold on to your beliefs, I guess...
 
Top