The proportion is also affected by the speed of the CPU. i.e the faster the CPU, the smaller the serial part becomes. Yes, it's just a fancy way of saying that as you remove the CPU bottleneck the proportion of parallelizable work tends toward 100% of the total. But even on the GPU a lot of stuff is serialized - geometry setup for example. Hence the multiple setup engines in Fermi. The more stuff you parallelize, the easier it is to scale performance.Originally Posted by Deimos
not much, gpu applications like graphics are embarassingly parallel and this parallelism increases with problem size. i.e. if you double the pixel count you double parallelism. this law sounds very grim but truthfully its not. gpu's are already running thousands of threads to hide latency.
xtreme edition
id def pay 100$ ,or even more, extra to have a card that is fully unlocked and has access to dividers and lets me enable and disable different blocks
theres a standard for gpu fan headers?
even if, how would you know if the 470 or 480 have a higher spec for fans? what IF they would consume a lot of power? nvidia would run into an issue cause according to the spec they cant use a powerful fan to cool the card?![]()
huh? how do you get to 23k rpm? i dont think rpm scale linearily...
i used to test a lot of fans and measured their amps, and those ratings were always higher than what i actually meassured, regardless of the voltage i fed them and if they were spinning up or running full speed... still, 1.8A is a very high rating for a fan, and while it may mean nothing, it MAY point towards higher power consumption... a bigger heatsink costs a lot more than just a more powerful fan that increases the amount of heat it can remove...
and if you look at that pic of the 470 heatsink again, how exactly could it be any larger? the only way to make it longer would be to move the fan to the right, which isnt possible because the holes in the pcb would be very close to the right edge of the pcb, meaning there wouldnt be enough space to put components on there. and the only way to make it higher would be to go above atx case specs... and that wouldnt help much cause the air channel fed by the axial fan isnt as wide as the entire card, so... that heatsink is the biggest exhaust heatsink you can fit on a 470 card...
Deimos, you proved that its possible to write terrible code that performs incredibly slow, so what?
i think nvidia is pretty good at getting efficiency out of their asics... they designed them! its a custom instruction set asic, instructions that THEY thought up and implemented... if anybody knows how to use that design efficiently its nvidia themselves
but maybe im just assuming a lot here... we all know how sad things look in many companies when you peek behind the pr facade![]()
That fan can push at least 110CFM and it is 92x92x38mm and looking at the 470GTX with fan of 75X75X30 it does make sense to have higher Amps to push the same CFM but still both ratings are very high .. and with 1.8A that is definitely too much rpm
Edit: anybody has any info about the 285/280GTX fan
Last edited by kemo; 03-08-2010 at 02:19 PM.
Intel Core I7 920 @ 3.8GHZ 1.28V (Core Contact Freezer)
Asus X58 P6T
6GB OCZ Gold DDR3-1600MHZ 8-8-8-24
XFX HD5870
WD 1TB Black HD
Corsair 850TX
Cooler Master HAF 922
I bought the highest performance Delta fan I could find for my PC once, just looking at the RPM and CFM numbers.
I think that could be what caused my hearing loss
I think I still have it somewhere. I dont care how well or bad the Fermi performs, but I'm sure that no one wants another FX 5800 paintdryer.
Main Rig: Phenom II X6 1055T 95W @3562 (285x12.5) MHz, Corsair XMS2 DDR2 (2x2GB), Gigabyte HD7970 OC (1000 MHz) 3GB, ASUS M3A78-EM,
Corsair F60 60 GB SSD + various HDDs, Corsair HX650 (3.3V/20A, 5V/20A, 12V/54A), Antec P180 Mini
Notebook: HP ProBook 6465b w/ A6-3410MX and 8GB DDR3 1600
1.8A does seem like a lot. But We don't know anything about the thermals of these chips either. And the fans won't be spinning 100% all the time. You can't draw any conclusion just from the max power draw, you have to know the fan profile as well.
For you and SKYMTL to dismiss it as a typo because you can't imagine a cooler needing a fan with that much power is a simple argument from incredulity - a common logical fallacy.
actually, id prefer a card with a fan that CAN push a lot of air even if its noisy over one that cant...
but would i want it to be noisy at stock speeds under load? of course not....
about the fx comments... well maybe noise wise, but that would be a really stupid mistake from nvidia...
perf wise gf100 wont be able to fail as bad as nv30... no way... you guys dont remember how bad geforce fx really was... it was slower than its predecessor, something that is simply (luckily) impossible with gf100 as the architectures of gt200 and gf100 are too similar...
It's a fact. Just got off the phone with a rep at Delta. Listed spec is the CSA maximum for the input amperage that the fan motor will support. Info on their site is the "typical" usage parameters.
However, we will see when the reviews are released and comments are made about how loud / quiet the fan is.
Last edited by SKYMTL; 03-08-2010 at 02:57 PM.
any idea on GTX480 PCB size?
--lapped Q9650 #L828A446 @ 4.608, 1.45V bios, 1.425V load.
-- NH-D14 2x Delta AFB1212SHE push/pull and 110 cfm fan -- Coollaboratory Liquid PRO
-- Gigabyte EP45-UD3P ( F10 ) - G.Skill 4x2Gb 9600 PI @ 1221 5-5-5-15, PL8, 2.1V
- GTX 480 ( 875/1750/928)
- HAF 932 - Antec TPQ 1200 -- Crucial C300 128Gbboot --
Primary Monitor - Samsung T260
Even if the fan is 1.8A, 100% could not translate into 1.8A.
I remember w1zzard talking about something related to fan control through BIOS, so, even if the fan CAN pull 1.8A, BIOS might be able to not let it happen.
Right?
Are we there yet?
That makes sense. Did he say what the F in the model number stood for? They have a PDF that explains their naming scheme, but the F didn't make any sense according to it.
It seems like a rather powerful fan and a decent cooler. But we really can't draw any conclusion about how hot the chip is without knowing what the fan profile is. We will have to see how loud it is when it is released, but personally I wish they had used a bigger fan.
2900XT fan:
G80 and GTX280 fan:
![]()
Last edited by mindfury; 03-08-2010 at 03:52 PM.
looks like GTX470 SLI...
anybody with two HD5870s to compare?
480:
http://bbs.pczilla.net/attachments/m...ee82e7a341.jpg
5870 1GHz/1250MHz (core/mem) same setting as 480 in that video with Tessellation on
http://bbs.pczilla.net/attachments/m...994258a635.jpg
5870 1GHz/1250MHz (core/mem) same setting as 480 in that video only Tessellation off
http://bbs.pczilla.net/attachments/m...94d96c3616.jpg
5870 1GHz/1250MHz (core/mem) Tessellation on/off comparing
http://bbs.pczilla.net/attachments/m...c75a2f937a.gif
And? 1ghz 5870 performs same as GTX 480?
INTEL Core i7 920 // ASUS P6T Deluxe V2 // OCZ 3G1600 6GB // POWERCOLOR HD5970 // Cooler Master HAF 932 // Thermalright Ultra 120 Extreme // SAMSUNG T260 26"Has anyone really been far even as decided to use even go want to do look more like?
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