- Joined
- May 22, 2024
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- 411 (2.23/day)
System Name | Kuro |
---|---|
Processor | AMD Ryzen 7 7800X3D@65W |
Motherboard | MSI MAG B650 Tomahawk WiFi |
Cooling | Thermalright Phantom Spirit 120 EVO |
Memory | Corsair DDR5 6000C30 2x48GB (Hynix M)@6000 30-36-36-76 1.36V |
Video Card(s) | PNY XLR8 RTX 4070 Ti SUPER 16G@200W |
Storage | Crucial T500 2TB + WD Blue 8TB |
Case | Lian Li LANCOOL 216 |
Power Supply | MSI MPG A850G |
Software | Ubuntu 24.04 LTS + Windows 10 Home Build 19045 |
Benchmark Scores | 17761 C23 Multi@65W |
Off topic, but specifically for this card, its professional equivalent based around the same GPU, RTX 6000 Ada, has a power limit of 300W. Going by that logic, the best efficiency range for the consumer-grade RTX 4090 could be slightly lower than 300W, since it had less of the GPU chip active and only half the VRAM. It stands to reason that professional cards would be rated close to best efficiency for their expected usage pattern, or slightly above to account for overhead from the rest of the system.Nothing stops me or you from buying an RTX 4090 and running it at half power limit - at 225W that will become a very efficient GPU with surprising bit of its performance intact. The problem - this will bring its performance down to lets say RTX 4080 level. RTX 4080 would be much cheaper to buy.
Although if I remember correctly 4090 is most efficient somewhere around 300W where it does not lose as much performance and would still be faster and more effcient than RTX4080. More costly, still.
In my own experience, I could run a 4070 Ti Super at 200W instead of the rated 285W, and lose maybe 10-15% framerate or compute throughput doing so. The only significantly affected benchmark I've seen so far was FurMark. It also appeared that significant power - on the scale of 50W for this card - would be consumed by the memory bus and VRAM when they run at rated frequency, a consumption that won't be significantly reduced by reducing board power limit, amplifying actual GPU power reduction by percentage in such scheme.
So...yes, it aligns with expectations.