- Joined
- Nov 21, 2004
- Messages
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System Name | Dothan |
---|---|
Processor | Intel Pentium M 770 @ 160*16 |
Motherboard | MSI Speedster FA-4 |
Cooling | Zalman CNPS9500 LED |
Memory | Adata DDR2 @ 240 |
Video Card(s) | Sapphire HD3870 |
Storage | Maxtor DiamondMax 10 300GB | Hitachi 160GB | Seagate 250GB |
Display(s) | Samsung 920T + LG Flatron 22" |
Case | TT Tsunami Xaser Black |
Audio Device(s) | Creative Audigy 2 ZS |
Power Supply | Hiper type-R 480W |
Software | ATITool & SysTool |
Hello,
I've talked to a friend who stopped by. He said that the main reason why those who overclock for high scores on 3DMark06 and so forth do overclock the PCIe bus as it "Does" raise the core clock on the cards.
What I find confusing about the article as well as all of the replies to my own is that there are tons of articles dating back to 2006 stating that the nforce boards have linkboost and/or allowing changes to the PCIe frequency. So if these features have been available for over 2 years and the G80+ chipsets have also supported this for the past year or more. Why would it just now be noticed with a 9600 GT card when there are reviews and tech sites that say it's been available for over a year, maybe two?
I don't know when nvidia first offered the nForce 590 board or the G80 chipset. But there seems to be enough info stating that this shady feature has been around for quite some time.
Other sites were first to mention it in 2006. But some people are just now finding out while testing all of these new cards since there seem to be so much hype around them.
Chris
If you do take a look at the chart at page 2, because it seems that you havnt. http://www.techpowerup.com/reviews/NVIDIA/Shady_9600_GT/2.html
There you the theoretical benchmark, comparing PCI-E busspeeds on the 9600 and the older 8800, you will see that the shady feature isnt present at the later.