Originally posted by: Skott
The best RD600 info I have seen is over on the XS site. They got a admin/tech there playing around with one. NDA is still in effect but he's leaked some info. Suggested price is to be well less than $300 from the rumors I heard. $230-$250 is being bandied about. Pricing hasnt been fixed yet though last I heard. About another 10-11 days will know for sure.
Originally posted by: Skott
The best RD600 info I have seen is over on the XS site. They got a admin/tech there playing around with one. NDA is still in effect but he's leaked some info. Suggested price is to be well less than $300 from the rumors I heard. $230-$250 is being bandied about. Pricing hasnt been fixed yet though last I heard. About another 10-11 days will know for sure.
Originally posted by: neloX
If the 230-250 range (hopefully thats the launch price) is accurate this may well be worth holding out for. I've been looking for a motherboard that will last me 3-5 years with processor/video/memory upgrades along the way, and of course 2 16x pci-e slots for crossfire. Will it have PCI-E 2 slots?
Originally posted by: xenolith
I thought MSRP was going to be $220?
And I don't know if it's been stated in this thread, probably has, but anyway, DFI is the only manufacturer that picked up the RD600 chipset, AFAIK. DFI always takes much longer to release their offerings to the high end/overclocker/enthusiast market. IMO, that's probably the more plausible reason for the long delay, and not necessarily indicative to this chipset being abnormally buggy.
Originally posted by: Centurin
Asus has the chipset, but no word if they are actually doing anything with it. Mostly will depend on how well the DFI sells.
Originally posted by: regpfj
VRZone has some pics
edit... bah, gary beat me to it by 6 hours. And he has more pictures.
Originally posted by: BreezeDM
I been thinking about getting this motherboard, but I am worried about the crossfire speed.
From DFI website
" - 2 ATI CrossFire graphics cards (each operates at x8 bandwidth)."
I did some searching and all the crossfire motherboards I saw for core 2 have the same crossfire speed.
DFI's socktet 939 for AMD, cfx3200 has 16x Crossfire for both cards.
"- CrossFire mode: Each x16 slot operates at x16 bandwidth."
Nvidia's 680i runs at 16x for SLI.
I'm no expert and I was wondering if the difference is large for running 2 NVIDIA cars in SLI at 16x vs 2 ATI cards in Crossfire at 8x with comparable cards?
Also I was wondering why AMD chipsets with crossfire support 16x while intel has 8x crossfire chipsets?
Originally posted by: Skott
The difference between 8x and 16x (or 16x and 32x, depending on how you want to phrase it) is only noticeable at resolutions above 1600x1200. And even then its not huge. Its just a few percent. So unless you plan on running resolutions higher than 1600x1200 dont worry about whether its 8x or 16x.
Originally posted by: Skott
Originally posted by: BreezeDM
I been thinking about getting this motherboard, but I am worried about the crossfire speed.
From DFI website
" - 2 ATI CrossFire graphics cards (each operates at x8 bandwidth)."
I did some searching and all the crossfire motherboards I saw for core 2 have the same crossfire speed.
DFI's socktet 939 for AMD, cfx3200 has 16x Crossfire for both cards.
"- CrossFire mode: Each x16 slot operates at x16 bandwidth."
Nvidia's 680i runs at 16x for SLI.
I'm no expert and I was wondering if the difference is large for running 2 NVIDIA cars in SLI at 16x vs 2 ATI cards in Crossfire at 8x with comparable cards?
Also I was wondering why AMD chipsets with crossfire support 16x while intel has 8x crossfire chipsets?
The difference between 8x and 16x (or 16x and 32x, depending on how you want to phrase it) is only noticeable at resolutions above 1600x1200. And even then its not huge. Its just a few percent. So unless you plan on running resolutions higher than 1600x1200 dont worry about wether its 8x or 16x.
it doesn't have enough lanes.... at all.Originally posted by: ND40oz
Originally posted by: Skott
Originally posted by: BreezeDM
I been thinking about getting this motherboard, but I am worried about the crossfire speed.
From DFI website
" - 2 ATI CrossFire graphics cards (each operates at x8 bandwidth)."
I did some searching and all the crossfire motherboards I saw for core 2 have the same crossfire speed.
DFI's socktet 939 for AMD, cfx3200 has 16x Crossfire for both cards.
"- CrossFire mode: Each x16 slot operates at x16 bandwidth."
Nvidia's 680i runs at 16x for SLI.
I'm no expert and I was wondering if the difference is large for running 2 NVIDIA cars in SLI at 16x vs 2 ATI cards in Crossfire at 8x with comparable cards?
Also I was wondering why AMD chipsets with crossfire support 16x while intel has 8x crossfire chipsets?
The difference between 8x and 16x (or 16x and 32x, depending on how you want to phrase it) is only noticeable at resolutions above 1600x1200. And even then its not huge. Its just a few percent. So unless you plan on running resolutions higher than 1600x1200 dont worry about wether its 8x or 16x.
If that's the case, this is a deal breaker for me. I'll just go with the bad axe 2 for a QX6700 and dual X1950xtx setup. I wanted dual x16 slots for folding performance. Standfords already proven the x8 hampers performance when using the GPU clients. Now there is no reason to go with DFI solution. I don't see why they'd do this when the chipset supposedly supports 48 lanes, unless it doesn't...
Also, if you're going with a crosfire setup, I'd say most people are using above a 1600x1200 resolution.
Originally posted by: BreezeDM
"I'll just go with the bad axe 2 for a QX6700 and dual X1950xtx setup. I wanted dual x16 slots for folding performance. "
bad axe 2 is the same deal, when running crossfire each pci-express slots runs at 8x.
Originally posted by: PoopyPants
Originally posted by: BreezeDM
"I'll just go with the bad axe 2 for a QX6700 and dual X1950xtx setup. I wanted dual x16 slots for folding performance. "
bad axe 2 is the same deal, when running crossfire each pci-express slots runs at 8x.
thats the funniest thing i've ever heard. 1950XTX in crossfire making your folding better.
...By writing highly optimized, hand tuned code to run on ATI X1900 class GPU?s, the science of Folding@home will see another 20x to 30x speed increase over its previous software (Gromacs) for certain applications. This great speed increase is achieved by running essentially the complete molecular dynamics calculation on the GPU; while this is a challenging software development task, it appears to be the way to achieve the highest speed improvement on GPU's.
Are there any plans to enable the client to take advantage of dual-GPU systems like CrossFire, or even 3-slot systems that can support three GPUs? We will not support this at launch, but we are aggressively working to support multi-GPU systems.