EVGA GeForce 9600 GT SSC 512 MB Review 13

EVGA GeForce 9600 GT SSC 512 MB Review

Fan Noise »

Power Consumption

Cooling modern video cards is becoming more and more difficult, especially when users are asking for quiet cooling solutions. That's why the engineers are now paying much more attention to power consumption of new video card designs.

Test System
CPU:Intel Core 2 Duo E6550 2.33 GHz
(Conroe, 2x 2048 KB Cache)
Motherboard:Gigabyte P35C-DS3R
Intel P35
Memory:2x 1024MB A.DATA DDR2 1066+ CL4
Harddisk:WD Raptor 740ADFD 74 GB
Power Supply:OCZ GameXStream 700W
Software:Windows XP SP2
Drivers:NVIDIA: 169.04
ATI: Catalyst 7.11

In order to characterize a video card's power consumption, the whole system's mains power draw was measured. This means that these numbers include CPU, Memory, HDD, Video card and PSU inefficiency.

The three result values are as following:
  • Idle: Windows sitting at the desktop (1024x768 32-bit) all windows closed, drivers installed.
  • Average: 3DMark03 Nature at 1280x1024, 6xAA, 16xAF. This results in the highest power consumption. Average of all readings (two per second) while the test was rendering (no title screen).
  • Peak: 3DMark03 Nature at 1280x1024, 6xAA, 16xAF. This results in the highest power consumption. Highest single reading
Compared to similar positioned offerings from AMD, the 9600 GT has superior power consumption in 3D, but loses in 2D. This is because AMD's cards dynamically reduce their clock speeds to run cooler while idle and instantly ramp back up as soon as the card is under load. Compared to the reference clock 9600 GT, the EVGA 9600 GT has a slightly higher power consumption which can be attributed to the higher clock speeds it is running at.





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Aug 28th, 2024 18:18 EDT change timezone

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