qubit
Overclocked quantum bit
- Joined
- Dec 6, 2007
- Messages
- 17,865 (2.88/day)
- Location
- Quantum Well UK
System Name | Quantumville™ |
---|---|
Processor | Intel Core i7-2700K @ 4GHz |
Motherboard | Asus P8Z68-V PRO/GEN3 |
Cooling | Noctua NH-D14 |
Memory | 16GB (2 x 8GB Corsair Vengeance Black DDR3 PC3-12800 C9 1600MHz) |
Video Card(s) | MSI RTX 2080 SUPER Gaming X Trio |
Storage | Samsung 850 Pro 256GB | WD Black 4TB | WD Blue 6TB |
Display(s) | ASUS ROG Strix XG27UQR (4K, 144Hz, G-SYNC compatible) | Asus MG28UQ (4K, 60Hz, FreeSync compatible) |
Case | Cooler Master HAF 922 |
Audio Device(s) | Creative Sound Blaster X-Fi Fatal1ty PCIe |
Power Supply | Corsair AX1600i |
Mouse | Microsoft Intellimouse Pro - Black Shadow |
Keyboard | Yes |
Software | Windows 10 Pro 64-bit |
Dammit that's funny!
Nice bit of CGI work there with the graphics card, too. Notice how they inverted it, so it's going left to right instead.
NVIDIA's GK110 graphics processor was first introduced as a Tesla-only product to power demanding GPU compute applications. NVIDIA has now released it as a GeForce GPU too. It uses 7.1 billion transistors on a die size that we measured to be 561 mm².
AMD's Hawaii graphics processor uses the GCN shader architecture. It is produced on a 28 nm process at TSMC Taiwan, with 4.31 billion transistors on a 438 mm² die.
28% smaller die with the same performance +/- 3% but requires 40W more power = thermal dynamics of the efficiency. There is only so much heat copper can dissipate, a higher fan speed is going to be required as the die size is smaller and heat output more concentrated, the shaders are more efficiently utilized in the 290 than the Titan. I don't know how else to explain it to you, I'm sure if thy wanted to create a vapor chamber and alter the cooler and increase the price to $750 they would have, but they know who is buying the card, enthusiasts, with liquid cooling, or overclockers who would rather get a cheaper card and spend the extra $100 on a custom cooler.
If you actually look at the cooler its the exact same design as Nvidia uses, except the Titan has a vapor chamber.
So would you rather buy a card cheaper and be able to customize it, or buy the more expensive card like everyone else?
Well, the GPU is actually 6b not 4b transistors according to the review. It's less than GK110 on the same 28nm process, yet uses more power. I don't get it. Is the onboard power regulator that inefficient, perhaps? I don't know
Also, there's no excuse for putting a crap cooler on there. The GTX 770, a lower end card than the 290x, uses the exact same vapour chamber cooler as the Titan, yet doesn't cost the earth.
In short, it looks like AMD designed a GPU with bags of performance (I'm thinking of wizzy's comments about scaling) and then gimped it. Why the hell they'd do this I don't know. They'd make more money if they did it right. Did the beancounters strike, perhaps?
Check out the start of this O3D review and you'll see what I mean about the cooler.
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