Curiously, TPU's sample is "only" 850MHz and in all scenarios it - or rather,
the whole rig - consumed more or around equal amount of power than a HD4870.
Now, xbitlabs has a 900MHz sample and here's what they found when they measured the card's consumption (card only):
HD4890 @ 900MHz consumed significantly less power than HD4870, in all scenarios.
The GDDR5 memory chips are made by Qimonda and carry the model number IDGV1G-05A1F1C-40X. With a latency of 1.0 ns, they are specified to run at 1000 MHz.
1.0ns is the cycle time of the chip, not a latency.
This is AMD's new RV790 GPU. It is made in a 55 nm process at TSMC Taiwan with 956 million transistors. Please note that the die size is slightly increased from the RV770, the exact reason for that is unknown.
RV790 has 959 million transistors.
AMD has put two VT1165 voltage controllers on their cards. One is responsible for the VGPU core voltage and the second one controls the memory voltage.
Memory vDD is 1 phase, vDDQ is also 1 phase. vGPU is 3 phases (CPL).
What are those 2 phases for (that with the Pulse inductor pack)? And what controls them?