Then at least answer me this: Do you think three factory-overclocked 770s will outperform two reference model 780s?You realise how close the titan and 780 are yeah? And Im not going to do 3x770
Then at least answer me this: Do you think three factory-overclocked 770s will outperform two reference model 780s?
Chance of getting equal or better performance for less expense so I can spend more on other parts.Considering for it to run properly youd need a board with really good PCIE layout and lots of PCIE lanes..... whats the point?
Chance of getting equal or better performance for less expense so I can spend more on other parts.
Really Tom, I'm surprised at your intolerance. I don't see why I would spend nearly 1300€ on something without looking at other options first. You wouldn't tell someone to get a Titan just because it's the fastest single-GPU card ever, would you? I haven't bought anything yet so it's all good.Sometimes it will create more hassle and make the rig technically worse. IE 3 gpu's will get hot and noisey.... You are just being a bit narrow minded.
2 GPU's is where the sensible is at.
feel like you dad ffs.
Rebadged 680 - Better Prices - Nuff Said
Your only gonna get titan pcb and cooler if you get nvidia reference ......
And Reference are not gonna be around untill all these fake 770s have been sold ....
(pictures galore)
Look like Inno3D are the only ones using Titan reference cooler so far. Shame.
Quick question... How come you multiply the memory clock by 4 to get the effective memory clock? What's the difference?
^^ i still don't see why you would multiply by four...
GDDR5 (Graphics Double Data Rate, version 5) SGRAM is a type of high performance dynamic random-access graphics card memory designed for applications requiring high bandwidth. Unlike its predecessor, GDDR4, GDDR5 is based on DDR3 memory which has double the data lines ("DQ" lines) compared to DDR2 but GDDR5 also has 8 bit wide prefetch buffers like GDDR4.
Qimonda, a spin-off of Infineon, has demonstrated and sampled GDDR5,[1] and released a paper about the technologies behind GDDR5.[2] On May 10, 2008, Qimonda announced volume production of 512 Mib GDDR5 modules rated at 3.6 Gbit/s (900 MHz), 4.0 Gbit/s (1 GHz), and 4.5 Gbit/s (1.125 GHz).
From wiki as u can see GDDR5 4 gig has a clock speed of 1G uses double the data lines ("DQ" lines)
from memory the DDR side mean's is can write/read on both sides of the clock cycle ie: write/read when the clock is high/rise (1) or low/fall (0) effectively doubling the data rate!
Ok, so if I divide the 837Mhz clock rate into the data rate 3348 I get 4. So the GPU clock rate is multiplied by 4 to get the memory data rate, right