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Ghostpilot posted:Turns out that the "Quiet / Uber" switch position matters when flashing the bios. Seems that the memory type also matters, as it won't work on cards that have Elpida memory (which apparently is what Sapphire uses exclusively). Interesting. I would think the BIOS switch wouldn't really make a difference as it's easily overwritten. Seems like my MSI reference won't be able to be flashed though. It uses Elpida memory. Rahu X fucked around with this message at 19:46 on Nov 15, 2013 |
# ? Nov 15, 2013 19:34 |
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# ? May 14, 2024 03:36 |
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El Scotch posted:How much radiator are you using? A 360 in front that cools the cpu and a 360 in the back for the gpu loop.
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# ? Nov 15, 2013 20:48 |
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http://wccftech.com/amd-dual-gpu-hawaiixt-card-codenamed-vesuvius-coming-r9-290x-x2/ http://thepcenthusiast.com/amd-radeon-r9-290x-x2-vesuvius-dual-gpu/ I... umm... I just... umm... yeah... umm... what even. I have to hand it to AMD. They really did choose an appropriate name for it. At least if you go reference on it. Rahu X fucked around with this message at 21:30 on Nov 15, 2013 |
# ? Nov 15, 2013 21:27 |
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Rahu X posted:http://wccftech.com/amd-dual-gpu-hawaiixt-card-codenamed-vesuvius-coming-r9-290x-x2/ It'll turn your computer into a volcano. How do people realistically run cards like that in the real world?
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# ? Nov 15, 2013 21:42 |
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For comparison purposes, the Radeon HD 7990 took two 250W TDP cards and combined them into a 375W card, trimming 125W. The R9 290X uses ~311W for the same workload (in Quiet mode), meaning AMD will need to trim 247W to fit into the same TDP. I think we can expect performance to suffer by a larger margin than previous dual-GPU cards. I think nVidia targets exactly 300W for their dual-GPU cards, and since the GTX 780 Ti uses a similar amount of power to the R9 290X they'd have to trim more to make a GTX 790. nVidia's Boost seems to be more effective than AMD's PowerTune at extracting optimal efficiency from the available power and temperature headroom, but I don't know if we've seen enough analysis for me to say that with confidence. I think we'll see AMD partner boards with 450W TDPs drawn from 3x8-pin PEG connectors and triple-slot coolers. We're at the point where someone might even poo poo out some 600W monstrosity too. On another note, I'm still concerned about VRM cooling on R9 290 cards. It just strikes me as incredible that VRMs that overheat at normal (software max) fan speeds would be properly cooled when the fans are forced to higher speeds...versus just not quite overheating. It seems like AMD went to a lot of effort to cool that area of the card for it to be that simple, especially when overclocking, but maybe it really is fine and I'm just being a worrying babby. Anyone got a fancy IR camera and want to take pictures of the back of an R9 290X running BF4 with the stock cooler and an Accelero Xtreme III with high fans for comparison?
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# ? Nov 15, 2013 21:52 |
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go3 posted:Some days I don't know whether to cheer for you or against you Against, I am a bad influence, I mean you can go back a few pages and read my analysis of the current GPU situation and why doing what I'm doing is a bad idea for ANYONE, let alone somebody who just got a 780 that overclocks like a beast and runs stuff as well as most overclocked Titans can manage, and yet... https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=i3MXiTeH_Pg The only good things I do apart from trying to make some useful guides and that sort of thing involve dispensing generally solid "state of affairs" advice that I tend explicitly not to follow myself out of stupidity and chasing the dragon of another 25-35% improvement one wallet slam at a time, and then consequently providing expensive, high-performance, OC proven graphics cards at a good price to the good folks in this thread once I've used them for a year. poo poo it hasn't even been a year, I got this fucker in June! That's four months! sethsez posted:I'm sure it's not the first time you've said this, and I'm equally sure it won't be the last. This poster knows what's up Agreed fucked around with this message at 22:53 on Nov 15, 2013 |
# ? Nov 15, 2013 22:45 |
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Confession time: I bought my Sapphire 7970 Ghz Vapor-X in...early July or so, and sold it to a friend in September for something bigger and better. So you're not alone! By the way, maybe there's been a miscommunication on my part, but are going in the order of: You get the Ti > Send the 780 to Calvary > Calvary sends the 7970? I figured that was the way we were going since nobody would be without a card. Or are we going in reverse order to get the money to you to get the Ti?
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# ? Nov 15, 2013 23:02 |
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Ghostpilot posted:Confession time: I bought my Sapphire 7970 Ghz Vapor-X in...early July or so, and sold it to a friend in September for something bigger and better. So you're not alone! I figure it's more comfortable for everyone if the order goes bottom-up instead of top-down. He sells his card to your friend, I sell my card to him, then everyone who wanted a card has a card, and everyone who needed money to buy a card has money to buy a card. I can limp along on my 650Ti for a few days waiting on a 780Ti to arrive, I'm assuming Sidesaddle is fine with waiting for the post office to get him his card, and it seems better this way in terms of ensuring that everyone has what they need in order to get what they want. I guess in a way I'm "securing" the purchase chain, for lack of a better term, by the fact that I am willing to flat out buy a 780Ti just to have it even if all the rest fell through, but there's a nice order of good graphics pay-it-forward happening and I don't want to gently caress it up by insisting on me-first when, truthfully, it's not like I'm having graphics problems, I've got a GTX 780, you know?
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# ? Nov 15, 2013 23:13 |
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Bleh Maestro posted:It'll turn your computer into a volcano. Maybe if AMD stopped using cheap lovely plastic crap for their reference coolers...
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# ? Nov 15, 2013 23:36 |
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I'd be surprised if they used the reference cooler on a card like that. Anything less than a very good double slot HSF a la the Accelero would be idiotic, especially after all the complaints on enthusiast forums about the reference cooler. IMO if they're going to do it right they should release a 3 slot HSF for a card like that. Done properly they could get rid of 300w+ of heat with a HSF like that without much if any noise and still keep the clock speed up. Avg. Joe Sixpacks will laugh but people actually interested in buying a CF-on-a-stick video cards won't really care too much. PC LOAD LETTER fucked around with this message at 23:53 on Nov 15, 2013 |
# ? Nov 15, 2013 23:51 |
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Agreed posted:I figure it's more comfortable for everyone if the order goes bottom-up instead of top-down. He sells his card to your friend, I sell my card to him, then everyone who wanted a card has a card, and everyone who needed money to buy a card has money to buy a card. I can limp along on my 650Ti for a few days waiting on a 780Ti to arrive, I'm assuming Sidesaddle is fine with waiting for the post office to get him his card, and it seems better this way in terms of ensuring that everyone has what they need in order to get what they want. Well, in that case: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tj7al6MXu7U
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# ? Nov 15, 2013 23:56 |
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PC LOAD LETTER posted:I'd be surprised if they used the reference cooler on a card like that. Anything less than a very good double slot HSF a la the Accelero would be idiotic, especially after all the complaints on enthusiast forums about the reference cooler. IMO if they're going to do it right they should release a 3 slot HSF for a card like that. Done properly they could get rid of 300w+ of heat with a HSF like that without much if any noise and still keep the clock speed up. I reckon a modified form of Gigabyte's Windstream 3 could do it. 250W of cooler, but damned if it isn't good at moving heat off ... hot ... things.
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# ? Nov 15, 2013 23:56 |
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To be fair, the reference 7990 cooler is an open design. The 6990 was a.. semi blower design with a single fan and it both pushed air into the case and out of the back. That was awful and noisy. The 7990 one however is definitely more capable.. http://anandtech.com/show/6915/amd-radeon-hd-7990-review-7990-gets-official/16
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# ? Nov 16, 2013 00:19 |
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HalloKitty posted:To be fair, the reference 7990 cooler is an open design. The 6990 was a.. semi blower design with a single fan and it both pushed air into the case and out of the back. That was awful and noisy. Now I remember what the 7990 issue was - it was with Powercolor 7990s, they had some kind of terrible BIOS/fan controller issue that ended up causing the review models to tank badly. Or was it Sapphire. poo poo, it was one of them. Not all 7990s and not an issue anymore, that was a launch hiccup.
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# ? Nov 16, 2013 00:31 |
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Agreed posted:Now I remember what the 7990 issue was - it was with Powercolor 7990s, they had some kind of terrible BIOS/fan controller issue that ended up causing the review models to tank badly. Or was it Sapphire. poo poo, it was one of them. Not all 7990s and not an issue anymore, that was a launch hiccup. Yeah, there was a PowerColor 7990 before the 7990 was made official, so they had no reference design to go on. With the reference cooler or some custom setup, and given the recent framepacing fixes, it's not actually a bad card now. Edit: in fact, you can see PowerColor's fan results in that AnandTech article, they're sub-par HalloKitty fucked around with this message at 00:39 on Nov 16, 2013 |
# ? Nov 16, 2013 00:37 |
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HalloKitty posted:Yeah, there was a PowerColor 7990 before the 7990 was made official, so they had no reference design to go on. Yeah, I've been obsessively pouring over benchmarks lately and I tell you what it's a strong competitor to the 780 Ti Take an average of games and they're pretty much neck and neck. Edit: Movax, amigo, petition to change thread name to "click for expensive as hell performance boost" tia Agreed fucked around with this message at 00:47 on Nov 16, 2013 |
# ? Nov 16, 2013 00:40 |
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My boyfriend has Whatishappeningtome?
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# ? Nov 16, 2013 00:47 |
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Ghostpilot posted:My boyfriend has I'm so sorry
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# ? Nov 16, 2013 00:50 |
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To get this thread back in some kind of half-assed sensible track, the 290 bios flashing sure is interesting. Given that all boards are reference right now, if you're going to try to get the $500 card's performance for $400, now's the time to buy - but I don't really see much of a reason for it, given that the R9 290 non-x performs virtually identically to the R9 290x anyway. There's just so little separating them, I don't think it's really a great idea to risk a $400 purchase with a questionable BIOS flash for the sake of a theoretical maximum performance boost that small. We're not talking 6950 vs 6970, there just isn't a performance gulf to cross here. Potentially brick a $400 card to grab what isn't nearly worth $100 of performance difference in the first place? ... I don't know about that.Sidesaddle Cavalry posted:Hello, I am a grooving flourescent frog with asterisks for eyes. Let us proceed with the parade of grooving flourescent frogs with asterisks for eyes. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1pm4fQRl72k Agreed fucked around with this message at 01:05 on Nov 16, 2013 |
# ? Nov 16, 2013 00:59 |
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^^ oops, bad timing for me? Hello, I am a grooving flourescent frog with asterisks for eyes. Let us proceed with the parade of grooving flourescent frogs with asterisks for eyes. I hope this chain reaction we're doing causes a shockwave that will get other people on this thread into buying new cards this month. It will be terrible and be full of appeals to emotion and impulsive decisions and evil and the GPU makers will have all of our money, mwahahahaha. Sidesaddle Cavalry fucked around with this message at 01:19 on Nov 16, 2013 |
# ? Nov 16, 2013 01:02 |
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So the rumour mill is suggesting Asus is making a...765? I don't even know what to call it; a SLI 760 all-in-one that's a 4gb 780? I don't get it.
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# ? Nov 16, 2013 01:16 |
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El Scotch posted:
Well, it certainly would be an easier card to cool than a double290X Supaburn Edition. If ASUS can somehow sell it at a price point that makes people think about moving to it instead of a 780, there's that.
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# ? Nov 16, 2013 01:21 |
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Agreed posted:I'm so sorry It's really all your fault.
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# ? Nov 16, 2013 01:24 |
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El Scotch posted:
That's a bit of oversimplification of how memory access works with SLI/Crossfire (well, actually, you know, we lump those together but they achieve the goal differently, so let's just go with SLI and be specific)... But, yeah, two 760s in SLI but with 4GB of VRAM has been a good price:performance option since before AMD even launched the R9s, it's still a good option. Thing is though, it kinda looks like it in fact has 4GB of VRAM, full stop, which means it's really very explicitly just two 760s in SLI, hopefully without much downclocking since GK104 runs lean and the 760 is an especially lean running variety considering its performance. Kepler architecture has excellent performance per watt, as seen with the GTX 690 (or the mobile lineup of higher end Kepler GPUs), it's possible they could put it together on one PCB without having to scale back performance since it's not even close to hitting the PCI-e power headroom on its own, and cooling two 760s is far from impossible. If they wanted to put it up as a viable GTX 780 competitor I'd ask them to make a model with 8GB total of VRAM for two 4GB 760s in SLI, since barring overpriced varieties that's where the actual price:performance champ was at back when they were a new thing. I'm going to poke around and see if prices have come down on the 760s with 4GB of VRAM, as two of them in SLI might actually still be a really good price:performance anomaly if retailers are charging post-R9 pricing on them finally. Dual-card SLI and dual-card Crossfire are close to being solved problems; the need to move workloads around coherently still means that they sacrifice some performance just for that overhead and they can't compete with the frame timing of powerful single GPUs, but FCAT has been kinder and kinder to dual-GPU solutions lately. Edit: Nope, retailers still charging $300+ for them, that's $600 for two and for no sensible reason as that does not at all reflect the cost of the additional VRAM or of the minimal adjustment to the PCB required to accommodate them. Pretty lame considering how great AMD prices are on better performing cards, and how well AMD is doing with their own dual-card solutions lately. Gonkish posted:It's really all your fault. I am horrible Agreed fucked around with this message at 01:33 on Nov 16, 2013 |
# ? Nov 16, 2013 01:29 |
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Agreed posted:Nope, retailers still charging $300+ for them, that's $600 for two and for no sensible reason as that does not at all reflect the cost of the additional VRAM or of the minimal adjustment to the PCB required to accommodate them. Pretty lame considering how great AMD prices are on better performing cards, and how well AMD is doing with their own dual-card solutions lately. Someone can correct me if I'm wrong, but I feel as if the 4GB 760s are one of the worst price:performance cards one could go with, given that the same $300 buys a R9-280X which outperforms it by a good bit.
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# ? Nov 16, 2013 02:32 |
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SourKraut posted:Someone can correct me if I'm wrong, but I feel as if the 4GB 760s are one of the worst price:performance cards one could go with, given that the same $300 buys a R9-280X which outperforms it by a good bit. You're completely right, and it's really a missed opportunity as, at the time of introduction, they offered a price:performance point that had only a handful of precedents - but only the 2GB models were ever sold for a fair price. nVidia's general pricing response to AMD's introduction of the R9 series (including the sub-290 cards that are just the Tahiti GPUs but with TrueAudio etc.) has been, in my opinion, reactive and somewhat underwhelming, focusing more on the high end where there are fewer units sold regardless of the value prospect of a given SKU. $300 and under ought to be a frothing mass of pricing competition, and AMD clearly gets that and has done some really aggressive price competition, even before the R9 launch, but we haven't seen the same level of engagement from nVidia. My analysis would be that they're relying more on brand power and features that are already there, plus a great deal of integration into brand names and far superior mobile optimization software to get them into laptops... Competing in a different ecosystem where they know they can score points as opposed to really aggressively slugging it out in the desktop GPU space, since that's less of an impact on their bottom line, and they have enough brand power to coast for a bit on inertia while they work out their next moves. I mean, their game bundle is awesome, and some of the cards have had good price drops, but who in their right mind would get a GTX 760 4GB for $300 when you can get a 7970GHz edition (by any other name) for the same, or, sticking with nVidia, go up a bit in price to nab a significant boost in performance with a GTX 770. After this bundle expires, what's next to keep up the value proposition in the face of strong price competition? It doesn't do just to compete in the high end, though they've got diversified revenue streams and don't have too much to worry in terms of market share... Maybe, like Intel, they're just okay at this point with overcharging enthusiasts because we'll grumble but we'll take it. AMD doesn't have that luxury.
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# ? Nov 16, 2013 03:29 |
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Hot drat, finally got my new PC built, with a shiny new GTX 780 TI in it, and drat is this rig fast and quiet now! My last PC was pushing 7 years old, so this new beast with all the latest bells and whistles is a drat treat. Got a bit of a scare when I plugged it in for the first time and nothing happened, but it turned out it was just that the wall socket was dead. Other than that, was a pretty smooth build.
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# ? Nov 16, 2013 09:33 |
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Bloody Hedgehog posted:Hot drat, finally got my new PC built, with a shiny new GTX 780 TI in it, and drat is this rig fast and quiet now! My last PC was pushing 7 years old, so this new beast with all the latest bells and whistles is a drat treat. Quick Q, what's your resolution and how much are you literally in love with your graphics card because I'd like an idea of where my heart will lie soon.
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# ? Nov 16, 2013 09:35 |
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Agreed posted:Quick Q, what's your resolution and how much are you literally in love with your graphics card because I'd like an idea of where my heart will lie soon. Running 1920x1080 right now, but in a few paychecks I'll be upgrading the monitor to something larger and higher res. And so far, very in love with this card. Virtually inaudible at idle, and under load just a gentle whisper. Part of that has to do with designing my entire system with quiet parts and a quiet case(without going full-on water-cooled), but it's still a very, very quiet card for how powerful it is. And although I don't put much stock in artificial benchmarks, it completely and utterly destroyed my old GTX 580 in 3DMark.
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# ? Nov 16, 2013 10:22 |
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I went from a 7950 to a GTX 770 to an R9 290X. I bought the 7950 in August... I I got the 290X on day one too, so seeing all this stuff about the 290 being as good for less money is just more salt in the wound haha
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# ? Nov 16, 2013 10:27 |
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Bloody Hedgehog posted:Running 1920x1080 right now, but in a few paychecks I'll be upgrading the monitor to something larger and higher res. See, this is why I am not even really particularly married to a non-reference cooler - it'd be neat to get guaranteed exceptional components (i.e. it's known that Gigabyte is using Samsung or Hynix VRAM, and EVGA is using Hynix VRAM exclusively) but the reference cooler is just absolutely phenomenal. AMD, step it up fellas, people care about that poo poo and I want you to sell more things And, yeah, while the GTX 580 is still a hell of a card (Fermi part two was awesome), we already hit "card as good as two of them in SLI" with the GTX 780 provided it can hit a high enough overclock. We're into the "but can it beat a 690/7990" enthusiast space now, and, surprisingly, holy poo poo, apparently so in a suitably broad average of games, again provided it's got a respectable overclock (though even stock it turns in some pretty incredible numbers for one GPU going up against two powerhouses on one board - that being the rub, I reckon two 7970s in Crossfire proper would win out). Digital Jesus posted:I went from a 7950 to a GTX 770 to an R9 290X. I bought the 7950 in August... That ... well, hey, man, you've got a 290x, that's, you know, that's pretty great, right?
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# ? Nov 16, 2013 11:58 |
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Newegg currently has a pricing mistake on a Sapphire 7970 3GB GHz Edition for $220 after $20 rebate. I was half-heartedly looking for a replacement for my 560 Ti this holiday shopping season and I think I just found it.
Josh Lyman fucked around with this message at 15:49 on Nov 16, 2013 |
# ? Nov 16, 2013 14:00 |
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Agreed posted:"click for expensive as hell performance boost" I love/hate you, Agreed. I went to EVGA Europe and they had ACX 780 Ti's in stock. What have I done?
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# ? Nov 16, 2013 14:03 |
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Just a reminder that the GTX 780 is still a much better value if you're looking for high performance on the green side of things... I hope I'm not actually inspiring people to make bad value purchasing decisions, I don't know how to be clearer that I'm doing something dumb but enjoyable and that it's hardly necessary. The difference in FPS is something like, if a modern engine stresses DX11 properly, the 780 might put out 45fps while the 780Ti will be closer to 55fps or so. Since I'm going with G-Sync early on that's actually kind of a big deal, but for anyone who is sticking with conventional vsync and non G-sync monitors it is pretty far off the price:performance curve. My reasoning is pretty half-baked at any rate, but I hope you cats are just joking about doing this because of some warped influence I actually have, I take no responsibility for others' bad value purchases
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# ? Nov 16, 2013 14:52 |
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Oh I'm great at being a dumb on my own, you were just the straw that broke the camel's bank account. Haven't had a card since the 8800GTX, it is time. Hype as hell and it hasn't even shipped yet.
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# ? Nov 16, 2013 16:12 |
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Yolshi posted:Oh I'm great at being a dumb on my own, you were just the straw that broke the camel's bank account. The 8800GTX was expensive and fast, but not unreasonable, unlike the ridiculous 8800 Ultra. I seem to remember the Ultra being the card for the discerning money-hater.
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# ? Nov 16, 2013 17:36 |
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In 290 Unlocking news, here's the tally of manufacturers that have locked / unlocked cards.airisom2 posted:Just gonna update the status so far:
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# ? Nov 16, 2013 17:49 |
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Assuming I'm the crafty type, is there any reason that I can't jury-rig a closed-loop liquid CPU cooler onto a GPU die? Does the rest of the chipset really get that hot or could I stick some copper fins on the rest and let the case airflow do its job? I'm not overclocking and I just want to reduce noise at max load. The EVGA 770 I've got is surprisingly loud and Newegg has a quality liquid CPU cooler for $50.
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# ? Nov 16, 2013 17:52 |
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Well, it seems like running the Accelero Xtreme III at 12V is more than adequate after all. Even with a decent OC. It's making me thinking about finally getting around to installing mine sometime this weekend, or whenever I get the free time to do so. I'll be sure to post some results afterward. There's also some theories going around saying that you might be able to fully control it via PWM since 13.11 Beta9.2 changed how the fans work, but I haven't seen any results on that yet. Not going to bother with that either, as the fan seems quiet enough under 12V that it won't be much of a bother.
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# ? Nov 16, 2013 17:53 |
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# ? May 14, 2024 03:36 |
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In addition to the above, here are some results with the Gelid Icy Vision rev2. I'm thinking of snagging the Powercolor and a Gelid. Just a shame that it doesn't come with BF4 to help offset the cost of the cooler. Edit: Agreed! Help! Talk me out of this! Ghostpilot fucked around with this message at 18:02 on Nov 16, 2013 |
# ? Nov 16, 2013 17:56 |