guskline
Diamond Member
- Apr 17, 2006
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What's the max power target?
Deders went home for lunch and fired up MSI Afterburner ver 4.3Beta4 and was able to more the power up to 120%
What's the max power target?
Guru3d mentioned that all 1080's are basically limited by Nvidia at a hardware or some other deep level preventing high overclocks. That ROG Strix only goes to 2050mhz. Same as the 600 series. Mid range, gimped overclocking. Must wait for real cards to come out if you want good OC's.
This whole thing still pisses me off. These are mid range cards. They don't even OC very well. They are not much faster than existing flagship cards. They are only exciting at a mid range price point. That's the whole reason for them to exist. They are exciting at a mid range price point, but disappointing and lack luster at flag ship pricing because they are very obviously not a flagship caliber of product.
Nvidia gimps the OCability of the mid range cards so that they won't step on the toes of their over priced high end chips.
I'm as turned off as the next guy about pricing, but even if they're not maxwell overclocking, to say they don't OC very well is flat wrong. Hawaii didn't OC well. Fiji didn't OC well. Those are my definitions of poor overclockers. With adequate cooling, GP104 is OCing decently.
http://www.techpowerup.com/reviews/ASUS/GTX_1080_STRIX/27.html 17% faster than reference speed is nothing to be kicking the ground over.
17% faster than reference is pretty meh, when you could get twice that (34%) from 980 Ti aftermarket cards.
Of course one could argue that this is not so much a case of GP104 being mediocre as it is a case of GM200 being exceptional, but it still puts Nvidia's claims of "crazy overclocker" for GP104 in perspective.
Also if Hawaii is your definition of a poor overclocker then GP104 should also count as a poor overclocker, seeing as Hawaii got roughly the same 12-17% that GP104 is showing. (Hawaii overclocks on TPU: 15%, 20%, 12%, 14%, 10%, 12%)
HB SLI bridges are now available from Nvidia.
How does one define a percentage overclock in Boost 3.0 age, when the reference clock isn't really a fixed number? The spec page lists 1607MHz and 1734MHz, but if out of the box you average a boost to 1800MHz and through overclocking you bring that to 2000MHz is your OC 11%, 15%, or 24%? With my Hawaii cards it's pretty simple, when I crank it up to 1200 that's a 27% overclock over the fixed 947MHz base frequency.
Is there a generally agreed upon consensus as to what numbers to use for this?
Now for the reviews.
HB SLI bridges are now available from Nvidia.
How does one define a percentage overclock in Boost 3.0 age, when the reference clock isn't really a fixed number? The spec page lists 1607MHz and 1734MHz, but if out of the box you average a boost to 1800MHz and through overclocking you bring that to 2000MHz is your OC 11%, 15%, or 24%? With my Hawaii cards it's pretty simple, when I crank it up to 1200 that's a 27% overclock over the fixed 947MHz base frequency.
Is there a generally agreed upon consensus as to what numbers to use for this?
Anybody have any idea how many watts the led's on the asus strix are likely to take up?
1? What kind of power-budget are you that makes it in any way a cause for concern? I'd guess a case fan uses an order of magnitude more power than LEDS on graphics cards.
The little LED bulb only uses 0.02 Watt/Volt.
And it's just 1-3 bulbs that can get all those colours?
For those of you that didn't catch this.. I'll just leave this here: http://videocardz.com/61121/asus-and-msi-accused-of-sending-modified-cards-to-the-press