3 times more shaders! but only 30% or so more performance ? Not really a worthy upgrade over GTX580 TBH.
3 times more shaders! but only 30% or so more performance ? Not really a worthy upgrade over GTX580 TBH.
if it was 3x the old shaders it would have been a 450w gpu and around 800mm2, after the shrink!
worthy upgrade or not is your opinion though.
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XS Build Log for: My Latest Custom Case
It is important to understand the architectural development on Fermi and Kepler and how they differ.
Essentially, Fermi was die size limited which meant NVIDIA had to add performance without increasing the transistor count. In order to do this, they ran the shader domain at double the speed of the other processing stages. Unfortunately doing so increased heat production and power consumption.
GK104 meanwhile doesn't have the same limitation partially due to the 28nm manufacturing process and partially due to optimizations within the architecture that limit the number of transistors needed for certain processing stages. This has allowed for a drastic increase in the core count but in order to keep power consumption to reasonable levels, NVIDIA is now running the clocks at a 1:1 ratio. There are some other changes like PolyMorph Engine reductions (even though they do run at close to double the speed) and caching changes that can also count towards the non-linear performance increase from Kepler GPC to Fermi GPC.
If you have any particular questions. Let me know.
Well then again, if the 7950 / 7970 had been much more appropriately priced, the GTX 680 would have cost even less
Remember that GK104 was always meant to have been this generations mid range, not the high end. Now Nvidia get to sit back and take it easy for a year or so with the GK104 performing so well, and then whenever AMD manage to catch up yet again spurting their 'Verdetrol' garbage marketing, out comes the GK110 which beats AMD again with a year old architecture.
And please note I was an ATI fanboy up until the HD 5000 range, both the 6000 and 7000 ranges have disappointed me significantly compared to what Nvidia have had on offer since their Fermi refresh.
Well the GK104 was meant to have been an 'upgrade' over the GTX 560ti, not an upgrade of the GTX 580. GK110 was meant to have been the GTX 580 replacement. I was meant to have been purchasing two GK104s right now for <£450 for my next SLI setup, but due to AMD's underwhelming HD 7000 cards that wont be happening.
Last edited by Mungri; 03-22-2012 at 10:33 AM.
no way to know that
the 7000 gpus are nothing special when it comes to price/perf, but if you wanted lower power, and more perf, you paid for it, simple as that. it beat the competition in every way but pricing. if they launched at 450$ for the 7970, i doubt nvidia would have sold the 680 for anything under 450$ since they can still push it as being a faster gpu and worth more.
2500k @ 4900mhz - Asus Maxiums IV Gene Z - Swiftech Apogee LP
GTX 680 @ +170 (1267mhz) / +300 (3305mhz) - EK 680 FC EN/Acteal
Swiftech MCR320 Drive @ 1300rpms - 3x GT 1850s @ 1150rpms
XS Build Log for: My Latest Custom Case
I was hoping it would fare better in luxrender =(
trust me, if they had GK110 ready to go, it would be out now and selling for 800$
if they wait until september, they sure dont save money by sitting on a ready part, but they will loose about 200-300$ per gpu that would have sold between now and then.
and 2 months ago when the 7900s launched, they would have been to late in the process to make any drastic changes like launching in 2 months vs 10 months. their schedule internally has been set for september (if that really is their launch time) for atleast a year now.
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GTX 680 @ +170 (1267mhz) / +300 (3305mhz) - EK 680 FC EN/Acteal
Swiftech MCR320 Drive @ 1300rpms - 3x GT 1850s @ 1150rpms
XS Build Log for: My Latest Custom Case
I just dont believe that the 256 bit GK104 was ever designed or meant to have been released as a competitor for the high end GPU segment if AMD had pulled off what was expected from their 28 nm architecture.
There goes the Nvidia's haters, if it outperforms the 7970, its going to cost more. Nvidia was being modest actually when they said they expected more from AMD.
Just imagine if gk110 came out first and gk104 was released second. This would have been a beat down worse than gtx 8800.
Gk110 is going to be a beast. At 649 or 699, gk110 will completely warrants its price as it should step on the toes of the 7990.
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Does the 680 support Bitstreaming audio?
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Here's my review if anyone's interested - http://bit.ly/GTX680Review
Exactly. Holding back a new core that could absolutely stomp AMD would make very little financial sense. Launching GK104, which is a smaller die on the unknown 28nm process gives NVIDIA the chance to figure things out before they release a massive 250-300w monster. That is of course if NVIDIA chooses that route. Who knows, maybe they'll instead release a dual-GPU card based on binned GK104 cores. I'd be happier to see NVIDIA adopt the AMD route of more smaller, efficient cores.
Now, how in the heck is AMD going to counter this? Can't really ramp up the clocks on Tahiti to gain another 30% in performance. Couldn't imagine AMD would want to get in to the gigantic GPU market that NVIDIA has traditionally run in. Do they release a 7990 with binned Tahiti cores? Or figure out their scaling issues between pitcairn and tahiti(7870/7970)? Would be great if it all came down to driver optimizations.
I disagree, holding it back means that they dont need to spend as much on R+D for their next card. They have a card out now that comfortably beats the 7970, so they had no need to release a better one.
The GTX 680 was actually originally meant to have been the 670 Ti:
http://www.xtremesystems.org/forums/...-as-GTX-670-Ti
Im sure that the GTX 680 would have at least been a 384 bit card with an 8 + 6 pin power conector.
Mmmm, the card looks great until I read the XBit review and saw the overclocking results. Is it me or does it perform slightly worse than the 7970 when they are both overclocked. If this is the case, then I'll have to think hard and long about which to go for, as I generally OC anything I buy.
Perhaps. With the GTX 680 in theory being cheaper to manufacture than the HD 7970 it would make sense to hold the GTX 680 as the flagship card until AMD releases their HD 7990. Then, releasing a GTX 685/690 based on a 300w Kepler core(with a die size somewhere around GF100-G200) would set them up to compete on performance with less expensive silicon going in to this performance crown card.
Still, I doubt they developed GK104 and GK110 at the same time. Makes more sense from a risk management point to develop a small core on 28nm. Beats the hell out of having another GTX 480.
When both cards were overclocked in that review, there is so little difference between them that I wouldnt base my purchase decision on FPS alone. You have to remember that a 7970 is being overclocked from 925 to 1150 Mhz, and the GTX 680 from 1006 to 1186 Mhz in that review, so the 7970 is being given a larger boost over its reference clocks than the GTX 680 is.
I dont think that they did either, but I think that a 384 bit GK104 was being developed as the GTX 680, and Techpowerup have shown solid evidence that this 256 bit version was originally the GTX 570 Ti. GK110 is coming out much later.
Last edited by Mungri; 03-22-2012 at 12:57 PM.
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As usual I like sweclocker's reviews: http://translate.google.com/translat...mt-sli&act=url
Luckily I'm a swedish speaking Finn so don't need to use google translate either. It has SLI vs Crossfire tests too, overclocking, power consumption under both cirumstances for both ati and nvidia etc. Nice to see a maxed out stable OC on GTX 680 draws just marginally more power than a stock HD 7970.
On the other hand HD 7970 allows for a slightly bigger OC potential comparing with standard GPU bioses at least (GTX 680 could probably use a little higher than 1.1v even on standard cooler I think, at least 1.125~1.150 IMO and I personally wish 1.150 had been max with default bios which would be probably enough to get to a roughly similar OCability ratio as HD 7970 too).
Last edited by RPGWiZaRD; 03-22-2012 at 02:02 PM.
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If all people would share opinions in an objective manner, the world would be a friendlier place
I would imagine the GK110 will add the features that were subtracted from this release. maybe its something like Intel has started to do with separate consumer target arc and the professionals with a separate arc. So that means GK104 = SNB and GK110 = SNB-E.
Very good card a excellent alternative to 7970 or for that matter 7950. Its almost weird that early reviews pointed to a huge loaded consumption whereas the latest one dont....
Non the less AMD cant not just OC 7970 and sell it off against the 680 it has too much in efficiency.
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