- Joined
- May 4, 2009
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System Name | penguin |
---|---|
Processor | R7 5700G |
Motherboard | Asrock B450M Pro4 |
Cooling | Some CM tower cooler that will fit my case |
Memory | 4 x 8GB Kingston HyperX Fury 2666MHz |
Video Card(s) | IGP |
Storage | ADATA SU800 512GB |
Display(s) | 27' LG |
Case | Zalman |
Audio Device(s) | stock |
Power Supply | Seasonic SS-620GM |
Software | win10 |
consider them additional free data points, dont look at them if you don't care. they do provide some insight to some people looking at this from a non-consumer perspective.
nvidia's power capping reduces the clock speeds, which reduces power consumption and performance, effectively leaving performance per watt the same.
your precious hardocp measures power consumption at the wall and subtracts system wattage without graphics card in idle. ask yourself where the power is in that measurement that the cpu/memory/hdd/motherboard/psu inefficiency consume by going from idle without graphics card to 3d gaming load.
i know of someone working on a 3x 8 pin card without power limit that it designed like a tank
Exactly. W1z's reviews are more like a well written science research papers. They provide the most raw data of all reviews on the web and are the most analytical. On top of that he regularly goes beyond the line of duty, throughly recording voltage and frequency scaling - giving an inside of the quality of the silicon itself the inner workings of the architecture.
Now on the 590: Exactly what was expected from the leaked clocks. It's just not as efficient as cayman. And it also backs up my crazy paranoia theory that Nvidia purposefully did not allow EVGA and Galaxy to make dual 560 card and only limited them to using 460 chips because they knew that it would step all over the 590.
A dual 560 chip OCed to 900core at roughly 350W can easily play with the big boys see guru3d's 560 sli review for reference.
Oh and remember everybody, dig the review it takes just a few seconds.