One thing that people need to keep in mind is that not everyone is using the same testing methodology. While I appreciate Anand's articles, I have a hard time digesting the full load benchmarks in some articles since there are inconsistencies. They do appear to be measured at the wall with a kill-a-watt meter. In the future I would like to see the AnandTech editors list the particular psu they are using in the test system specs chart. This will allow people to get a better idea of the true load on the psu.
Take a look at these two AnandTech articles.
[*]Intel Core 2 Duo E4300: Affordable and Highly Overclockable
[*]GeForce 8800 Roundup: The Best of the Best
Considering the test beds are similar, and the X6800 draws 70-75W, why is there such a gap in the measured wall loads?
Running 3DMark will not yield a true full system load. You also need to be running a high resolution, HDD read/writes, and TAT or Orthos at the same time to determine a true full load IMO. Please take into account that the article(s) you refer to may or may not be accurate enough to support your own claims when you are recommending psu's and discussing power consumption.
We tested power consumption for these parts in the same way we usually do, by measuring the total power draw of the system with each of the cards installed in two different states. The first state is with the system idle (no other programs running) and the second is while the GPU is under stress testing. We use a few of the benchmarks from 3DMark06 to stress the GPUs to find out their power consumption under load. Because we are measuring the wattage of the entire system and not simply the cards, we can only get a general idea of the type of power levels of these cards.
Take a look at these two AnandTech articles.
[*]Intel Core 2 Duo E4300: Affordable and Highly Overclockable
[*]GeForce 8800 Roundup: The Best of the Best
Considering the test beds are similar, and the X6800 draws 70-75W, why is there such a gap in the measured wall loads?
Running 3DMark will not yield a true full system load. You also need to be running a high resolution, HDD read/writes, and TAT or Orthos at the same time to determine a true full load IMO. Please take into account that the article(s) you refer to may or may not be accurate enough to support your own claims when you are recommending psu's and discussing power consumption.