So it’s all hearsay? My card doesn’t “frequently” throttle, it always stays between 2800-2850.
And again the people who have hardware control over voltages and PL have gone above 3300, and I’ve heard of nothing about throttling behavior and artifacts related to a hardware defect we will never have proof of.
No shot they were going to release a 7900XTX that was 10% below 4090 while drawing 500-600w
Sigh
I'm going to explain this in the simplest sequence of events possible.
AMD designed RDNA 3.
They tested RDNA 3.
The found a serious artifacting problem that showed up hours into using the cards.
They made a "shitty fix" that stopped the artifacting problem.
The shitty fix stayed in the cards and they went to sale and reviews with the shitty fix in.
The shitty fix is now in your card.
Navi 32, Navi 40, and all other RDNA cards, either will have a proper fix, either don't need it (Navi 33 is monolithic).
The shitty fix can be a throttling, a re-sync between MCD/GCD, a this, a that, a those, we don't know, enter the AMD building, take a dev hostage at knifepoint, demand to know to them. We're not aware of the details of a big corporation's back kitchen.
What the rumour says is that the shitty fix is in for Navi 31 alone, and will not be necessary for later Navis.
Which makes me say that since months have passed, and that elusive "Big FineWine moment" where we expected that a driver update would take the cards from a somewhat paltry 35% perf improvement to the promised 50%, will probably not come. Because it's been months, and it may be months yet, and AMD has really little value in investing however many months to fix a problem that ultimately hits only certain cards.
I was under the original impression that Navi 31 had some driver issues and would HAVE to fix them because whatever wasn't fixed with the first chiplet design would go into later gens.
I have now been told that actually, no. So I'm surmising that AMD will probably not fix it and just happily move on to RDNA 4 with the fix in the silicon itself.