10tothemin9volts
New Member
- Joined
- Jun 26, 2023
- Messages
- 17 (0.03/day)
RTX 4070 vs RTX 4070 Ti power scaling
You may see also my previous power scaling post.
Couldn't wait for RTX 5000 series (rumor: RTX 5090 release in December and more affordable versions possibly only many months later), so upgraded from RTX 4070 to a used 4070 Ti. I didn't went for a 4070 Ti Super with its 16GB VRAM since I couldn't find a used one for much cheaper (it came out indeed: "too little, too late"). Also when I bought the 4070, it was the first NVIDIA card I used on Arch Linux and I wasn't sure if it was worth it spending much on a NV card, now I know that there are no issue. The perf increase will be useful for the 1-50% FPS lows in CS2:ZE since with 64 players the average FPS on some maps is like only ~30 FPS). And of course: No HDMI 2.1 on Linux on AMD is a deal breaker.
You may see also my previous power scaling post.
- After -35% power, the 4070 non-Ti drops much quicker. What are the reasons, maybe a better binned chip?
- After -5% power, the 4070 Ti scored slightly higher or not worse.
- Even after -50% power (285W*0.5=142.5W), the 4070 Ti scored higher than the 4070 non-Ti at full its 200W TDP.
Couldn't wait for RTX 5000 series (rumor: RTX 5090 release in December and more affordable versions possibly only many months later), so upgraded from RTX 4070 to a used 4070 Ti. I didn't went for a 4070 Ti Super with its 16GB VRAM since I couldn't find a used one for much cheaper (it came out indeed: "too little, too late"). Also when I bought the 4070, it was the first NVIDIA card I used on Arch Linux and I wasn't sure if it was worth it spending much on a NV card, now I know that there are no issue. The perf increase will be useful for the 1-50% FPS lows in CS2:ZE since with 64 players the average FPS on some maps is like only ~30 FPS). And of course: No HDMI 2.1 on Linux on AMD is a deal breaker.