The PS4 Pro will consume 145W more power than the PS4

Little disappointing that it has the exact same CPU.

Digital Foundry found a few areas in games that are quite CPU limited with the new Xbox One S, Different platform I know but odd that they would stay with the same CPU that's in both former consoles.
 
If they changed that it would require an extensive amount of work to get it to play games. It would basically be a entire new platform. By only increasing clock speed, it just allows it to run faster. And by inly switching the GPU, it makes it easy to port, then just having a go at increasing resolution, etc


I don't see how it's 300 watts though. If they are using a new Polaris GPU it would be much more power efficient than that even if was a 480
 
The PS4 Pro has a 36 CU GPU, this means Polaris 10... but I highly doubt that a 900 MHz clocked RX480 can pull much more than 120W. Well, given how GCN works, at that frequency it would probably use less than 100W

Where are the other 200W coming from?
 
Ridiculously flawed article. Is this what they call journalism now?

1. The max rating of the PSU is not the power consumption of the system.
2. The power consumption of the system has many more factors than the SoC.
3. The original PS4 used a 250W rated PSU, eventually dropping to 230W in chassis updates.
4. Sony DID state whether or not it runs the CPU at higher clock speeds(At the announcement no less), and it indeed does.

The Slim does has a 165W PSU and around 30% lower power consumption than original(Thanks to process node changes). Given that the Pro has double the number of GCN CUs, each at a ~15% higher clock speed(With the GPU being the bulk of the power draw of the chip), while the CPU is running at a ~30% higher clock speed, this power rating is entirely and 100% expected and logical to anyone who has any remote idea of what they're talking about.
 
Ridiculously flawed article. Is this what they call journalism now?

1. The max rating of the PSU is not the power consumption of the system.
2. The power consumption of the system has many more factors than the SoC.
3. The original PS4 used a 250W rated PSU, eventually dropping to 230W in chassis updates.
4. Sony DID state whether or not it runs the CPU at higher clock speeds(At the announcement no less), and it indeed does.

The Slim does has a 165W PSU and around 30% lower power consumption than original(Thanks to process node changes). Given that the Pro has double the number of GCN CUs, each at a ~15% higher clock speed(With the GPU being the bulk of the power draw of the chip), while the CPU is running at a ~30% higher clock speed, this power rating is entirely and 100% expected and logical to anyone who has any remote idea of what they're talking about.

Which apparently would not be you
 
Which apparently would not be you
Boy you've sure done me, with that well argued retort.

Anyone with a basic understanding of ESR and electrolytic capacitor ageing understands why the max rated values of these power supplys are often 30-70% higher than their expected maximum load in normal operation.
 
Your attitude would be more in question than your information. There is absolutely no reason to disrespect someone who has put a decent amount of time and effort into an article. Not to mention you are getting this for free....
 
I meant no disrespect to him as a person, but I stand by calling an article that's clearly been written without any research, littered with basic mistakes, "ridiculously flawed". Articles like these end up serving only to foster these PCMR circlejerks around consoles.
 
I meant no disrespect to him as a person, but I stand by calling an article that's clearly been written without any research, littered with basic mistakes, "ridiculously flawed". Articles like these end up serving only to foster these PCMR circlejerks around consoles.

Guys, I've think we've found the console peasant :p:p

Jokes aside, the information is coming straight from the PS4 official site..

Many people here DO have both a PC and a console, I don't because I can't afford it and I prefer a mouse and a keyboard for my games.

Also that double in consumption can't be blamed on minor things like the chipset (that won't have changed supposedly) or the RAM. It's either going to be the cpu or gpu. and if a slight overclock on the cpu doubles the consumption then I'm really curious how the hell are they going to keep thermals in check
 
I meant no disrespect to him as a person, but I stand by calling an article that's clearly been written without any research, littered with basic mistakes, "ridiculously flawed". Articles like these end up serving only to foster these PCMR circlejerks around consoles.

It doesn't matter, your attitude showed no sign of respect for the person that took the time to write it. At no point in the article do they claim that this information was verified by an expert.

In the future may I suggest you engage with something along the lines of, "Thanks for the article however, I'm not sure I agree with some of the conclusions. (explain politely)" rather than "Ridiculously flawed article. Is this what they call journalism now?.

(BTW I'm not posting this because I'm a mod, I just don't like seeing disrespect)
 
Boy you've sure done me, with that well argued retort.

Anyone with a basic understanding of ESR and electrolytic capacitor ageing understands why the max rated values of these power supplys are often 30-70% higher than their expected maximum load in normal operation.

Again wouldn't be you, everything just goes right over your head. Show some respect here. This isn't a disrespectful community, it's a small close group of people. If you want endless arguments and crap spewing posts, go to LTT forum. Otherwise, get along or run along as the Guv puts it
 
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I don't own any current generation consoles, and I didn't intend any disrespect(I just don't see the need to sugar coat my posts with pretentious niceties).
Given that the PS4 Slim has a 165W PSU and rarely seems to use more than 100W(More often around the 80-90W mark, naturally the load at which the PSU would be most efficient), it's safe to assume the PS4 Pro won't use anywhere near 310W in actual use, but likely much closer to the ~160W you'd expect from an underclocked RX480 tied with 8 Jaguar cores at ~2.3Ghz.
There's absolutely no reason to suspect that the articles sensationalist claim that it will consume 145W more power is even remotely true.
 
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