Power Consumption (Idle and Gaming)
Putting realistic, repeatable load on a GPU to get a decent idea of its real world power consumption has long been something we've experimented here at
bit-tech. We've found that synthetic benchmarks such as FurMark thrash the GPU constantly, which simply isn't reflective of how GPU will be used when gaming.
It's such a hardcore test that any GPU under test is almost guaranteed to hit its thermal limit, the mark at which the card's firmware will kick in, speeding up the fan to keep the GPU within safe temperature limits. Conversely, simply leaving a game like
Crysis running at a certain point also isn't reflective of real world use. There's no guarantee that the GPU is being pushed as hard as other titles might do, and the load will vary from play through to play through.
Eventually then, we've decided to use 3DMark06's Canyon Flight test as a real world representative, repeatable graphics test. It's a ferociously demanding test, pushing graphics cards to their limit, but also containing peaks and troughs in performance that match real world game play.
As the test is so demanding and GPU limited, we've set 3DMark to run the test at 1,280 x 1,024 with 0xAA and 16xAF (enabled in the driver), constantly looping the test for thirty minutes and recording the maximum power consumption and GPU Delta T (the difference between the temperature of the GPU and the ambient temperature in our labs).
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ATI Radeon HD 5770 1GB
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ATI Radeon HD 5870 1GB
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Nvidia GeForce GTX 260-216 896MB
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Nvidia GeForce GTX 285 1GB
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ATI Radeon HD 5850 1GB
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ATI Radeon HD 5830 1GB
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ATI Radeon HD 4890 1GB
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25
50
75
100
125
150
175
Power at socket (W)
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ATI Radeon HD 5770 1GB
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ATI Radeon HD 5850 1GB
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ATI Radeon HD 5830 1GB
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Nvidia GeForce GTX 260-216 896MB
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ATI Radeon HD 5870 1GB
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ATI Radeon HD 4890 1GB
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Nvidia GeForce GTX 285 1GB
Power at socket (W)
As our stock "reference" card will never see the shelves of your favourite e-tailer, we've chosen not to included any thermal performance figures until we get hold of a retail sample. Considering the power consumption of the 800MHz core clocked Cypress GPU though, we'd expect the need for some fairly meaty GPU cooling, at least in line with the current HD 5870.
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