eidairaman1
The Exiled Airman
- Joined
- Jul 2, 2007
- Messages
- 43,385 (6.75/day)
- Location
- Republic of Texas (True Patriot)
System Name | PCGOD |
---|---|
Processor | AMD FX 8350@ 5.0GHz |
Motherboard | Asus TUF 990FX Sabertooth R2 2901 Bios |
Cooling | Scythe Ashura, 2×BitFenix 230mm Spectre Pro LED (Blue,Green), 2x BitFenix 140mm Spectre Pro LED |
Memory | 16 GB Gskill Ripjaws X 2133 (2400 OC, 10-10-12-20-20, 1T, 1.65V) |
Video Card(s) | AMD Radeon 290 Sapphire Vapor-X |
Storage | Samsung 840 Pro 256GB, WD Velociraptor 1TB |
Display(s) | NEC Multisync LCD 1700V (Display Port Adapter) |
Case | AeroCool Xpredator Evil Blue Edition |
Audio Device(s) | Creative Labs Sound Blaster ZxR |
Power Supply | Seasonic 1250 XM2 Series (XP3) |
Mouse | Roccat Kone XTD |
Keyboard | Roccat Ryos MK Pro |
Software | Windows 7 Pro 64 |
The reason Fury and Vega was coupled to HBM is that AMD, being an underdog with next to no money for R&D had to take the risk and bet on something not traditional to have chances to win.
It worked quite well with Zen (Infinity Fabric), it didn't work with HBM, which nVidai also had project to develop with, just in case and because they sit on heaps of money, (thank you very much for buying overpriced cards), but unlike AMD, had resources for alternative, conventional projects
TI is unlikely, but 1080 levels are realistic to expect.
Hbm actually works well on vega, fury was a prototype.
Rtx is struggling in powerdraw against vega56 and 1080 in idle.
Just remember, AMD didn't go with gddr5x, they only had gddr5 and hbm 1/2.