Correct
@eidairaman1 I wouldn't mind that AMD and NV saod that over 1-2years that performance would be the same if they could cut power draw in half of their high-end cards that would be a innovation instead of pushing their cards to the absolute limit which doesn't benefit anyone.
It's been before lowering the power on the higher end cards and locking the clocks actually helps on power draw and some it's really like wow how much do it actually needs to pull and it's not like the 5% difference if you lower the power draw by 100W makes the difference in-game for majority of users.
Yea, were quickly approaching i9-9900K and beyond levels of insane bumps in power draw vs previous generations and its getting kind of scary. I am worried that NVIDIA, AMD and Intel are gonna peghole themselves like Intel did with the 9900K and beyond where they keep just increasing the amount of power and power and power until we got wattage monsters like the 14900KS which consume more watts than some GPU's. Which is utterly insane. For credit where its due, NVIDIA's 40 series was relatively power efficient but then they completely 180'd that with the 50 series not really being that power efficient (infact, I've heard some claims that the 5090 is drawing 30 to 35 watts more on average from the wall than what pops up on software. The other versions of the 5090, especially watercooled ones apparently can up pull to 100+ more watts than spec but I can't really verify that one so take that with salt.)
Efficiency is something I'm hoping AMD focuses a little bit on for the 9070- on a unrelated note. Hoping the Intel B770, if it ever exists, is also pretty efficient. I don't think NVIDIA will really care for efficiency anymore, which is really disappointing because if your gonna do a software generation (which is basically what the 50 series is) you'd *think* that efficiency improvements would be best implemented now than later, but nope.
On a more serious note, the industry went through several such changes, including during transition to ATX PSUs. Only now there might be a window for us to influence the next standard. If the change were coming what would you like to see in the connectors and PSUs ?
I don't think its the right time to try and introduce a standard yet. 12VHPWR has only been widely adapted since realistically the 40 series launch, we still, whether we like it or not, will probably have to pass on any opportunities to influence a new design because of that. If you asked this sort of stuff in maybe like 4 or 6 years time, I think people would be all over it.
In hydraulics, having multiple pipes over a single, larger one is bad design. At the same throughput, you'd have more losses.
The couple of courses I had on electrical engineering were more than a decade ago, but from what little I remember, the story should be the same.
I think that was some of the idea behind the 12VHPWR connector but its flopped in that regard, primarily due to safety concerns (which ironically make it harder to justify using over 6 or 8 pin It's not as straight forward as 'simplifying' it because not everything needs to be super simplified. If you simplify something too much your ultimately hurting it more than your helping it.
To kind of elaborate on what I was talking about earlier with another thing I responded to you about;
I don't think were ready for a new standard; even if I think many people are in agreeance that the current standard;
- Sucks.
- Needs redesigned (again), or completely gotten rid of.
But I don't think were at that point yet, nor ready yet. And I'm not sure that consumers are ready to jump on onto that realistically. We as enthusiasts can say what we want but 12VHPWR is still simpler than 6 or 8 pin despite the safety concerns and everything; and unfortunately, many consumers are pretty ignorant and don't really care for the safety stuff as long as its simpler. Consumers vastly prefer simpler products over ones that can seem more complicated, and its understandable, but it opens alot of room for carelessness on companies part, like we see with the 12VHPWR connector.
I also don't think motherboard manufacturers or GPU manufacturers really would jump on that, and you can try to introduce a new standard sure but it wont go anywhere if motherboard manufacturers and GPU manufacturers aren't on board.
It's a noble idea, your suggestion, and I like the thinking behind it. This whole thread is been really intriguing but I think of it more as a pipedream than anything.