Palit GeForce GTS 450 Sonic Platinum 1 GB Review 5

Palit GeForce GTS 450 Sonic Platinum 1 GB Review

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Introduction

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Today NVIDIA launches their new GeForce GTS 450 Series of graphics cards. As the "GTS" naming suggests, the card is more of a mid-range part than a high-performance device. It is NVIDIA's expressed goal to offer a low priced DirectX 11 graphics card that the majority of gamers can afford - and still play the latest games.

Architecture


NVIDIA's GF106 GPU is based on NVIDIA's Fermi architecture, which was released earlier this year. In order to achieve the product performance and positioning NVIDIA was looking for, they disabled some components of the full GF106 core, resulting in the graphics processor for the GeForce GTS 450. Unlike other Fermi-class cards the changes here are quite limited. Basically NVIDIA removed two memory chips from the design, two chips less means 2x 32-bit less bus interface, so a single 64-bit memory controller got disabled. The memory bus width is closely coupled to the number of active ROPs in the GPU, so one ROP partition is also disabled. Overall this change enables board partners to build more price competitive products because of the reduced cost for memory chips and PCB signal routing. It helps NVIDIA to increase its GPU yields. This also leaves NVIDIA with the option to create a more powerful "GTS 455" SKU at a later time, that has a 192-bit GDDR5 memory interface, with likely 768 MB or 1536 MB of memory.

It's interesting to note that NVIDIA did not disable any of the streaming multiprocessor units (SMs), and all four SMs holding 48 CUDA cores each are enabled, giving the CUDA core count of 192. NVIDIA's reference clocks on the GeForce GTS 450 are fairly low with 783 MHz core, 1566 MHz CUDA cores, and 900 MHz memory, so it comes as no surprise that most board partners are shipping pre-overclocked cards at lauch.

Palit has sent us their Sonic Platinum version of the GTS 450, which represents the company's highest clocked version. It comes with clock speeds of 932 MHz core and 1000 MHz memory. This is the highest clock combination of all GeForce GTS 450 cards reviewed today. As cooling solution the same heatsink is used that we have seen on their GeForce GTX 460 lineup before.

Radeon
HD 4850
GeForce
GTS 250
Radeon
HD 5750
GeForce
GTS 450
Palit
GTS 450 Sonic
Radeon
HD 4870
Radeon
HD 5770

GeForce
GTX 260

GeForce
GTX 460
Radeon
HD 5830
GeForce
GTX 275
GeForce
GTX 460
Shader units 8001287201921928008002163361120240336
ROPs161616161616162824162832
GPURV770G92JuniperGF106GF106RV770JuniperGT200GF104CypressGT200GF104
Transistors956M754M1040M1170M1170M956M1040M1400M 1950M2154M1404M1950M
Memory Size512 MB 1024 MB 1024 MB 1024 MB1024 MB512 MB 1024 MB 896 MB768 MB1024 MB 896 MB 1024 MB
Memory Bus Width 256 bit 256 bit 128 bit 128 bit 128 bit 256 bit 128 bit 448 bit 192 bit 256 bit 448 bit 256 bit
Core Clock625 MHz 738 MHz 700 MHz 783 MHz 932 MHz 750 MHz 850 MHz 576 MHz 675 MHz 800 MHz 602 MHz 675 MHz
Memory Clock993 MHz 1100 MHz 1150 MHz 900 MHz 1000 MHz 900 MHz 1200 MHz 999 MHz 900 MHz 1000 MHz 1107 MHz 900 MHz
Price$95$110$125$129$149$135$140$180$170$190$230$230
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Nov 21st, 2024 13:26 EST change timezone

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