Re: Radeon RX 7900 Series Launched
Why not? Many reasons.
First off, it's nearly impossible (if not just impossible) for MXM GPUs to have the same TDP as their desktop counterparts. High-TDP GPU chips require high-power VRMs. To do that on the small space offered by an MXM card will require some really expensive and top-dollar parts to get really good efficiency. Otherwise the VRM could overheat. In contrast, a regular PCI-E card can have more space, and thus cheaper parts could be used. And in the case of really really high output power like RTX 4090 desktop chips, it just might be impossible to make a VRM that fits on an MXM module. So the limited space of an MXM card will certainly either a) drive up the costs of the card or b) limit the output power... or in many cases c) both.
Next... and let's imagine the VRM issues above do not exist for a moment... the question is, how are you going to get that kind of power to an MXM card? Add 6/8-pin PCI-E connectors? If so, then it's no longer MXM format - at least not something you can stick in a laptop again. Also, the MXM edge connector will surely not be able to handle the power required by anything higher than a 100-120W TDP GPU, if even that much (though such is the case with PCI-E too already.)
And lastly... let's not forget that laptop GPUs aren't always exactly the same as their full-blown desktop counterparts. Either they have parts of the core cut off or run at a lower frequency to use less power. But in the cases where they are, then the mobile GPU essentially has to be "creme of the crop" silicon - i.e. the chips that can run at the highest possible clocks with the lowest possible voltages. So what happens to all of the GPU chips of the same model that can still run at the same frequency as the "top" silicon parts, but with much higher TDP requirements (due to needing higher voltage)? They either would have to be nerfed down in performance in order to meet the same TDP spec or not used at all. The latter would be a major loss for any production, so clearly that's undesirable. And the former is a missed opportunity to sell the same silicon as a better-performing card.
To see what I mean, take for example a regular RTX 2060 and compare it to a mobile RTX 2060.
regular RTX 2060:
https://www.techpowerup.com/gpu-spec...rtx-2060.c3310
mobile RTX 2060:
https://www.techpowerup.com/gpu-spec...0-mobile.c3348
You can see above that while both GPUs use the same exact silicon die, the mobile version is running at a much lower frequency (960 MHz) vs. that of the desktop version (1365 MHz). Same goes for the boost frequencies. As a result, the TDP of the MXM card is also lower. But then that's a loss in performance - a whooping 30% in some cases.
So going to an MXM form factor doesn't bring any advantages to what we have already with PCI-E.
Radeon RX 7900 Series Launched
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Re: Radeon RX 7900 Series Launched
You're not alone into thinking this and I agree with what you say 100%.
The reason video cards keep getting bigger and bigger is because of the ever-increasing TDP requirements. These top-end GPUs can use (dissipate into heat)... what is it now, upwards of 300 Watts? And all of that in 400-600 mm^2 of surface area. That's probably more heat output per surface area than my 75 Watt soldering station. So just think about it for a second!Probably sooner than later, that gag picture I posted above about the RTX 4090 may even become a reality.
And the way things keep going, I'm just surprised why manufacturers haven't ditched the whole concept of video cards being considered as "add-on" cards. IMO, they should have switched the design a long time ago, where you can mount a CPU tower cooler onto the GPU die... though with 300+ Watts of power, I think even many of the high-end CPU "tower" coolers would have a hard time getting rid of this much heat.
Maybe the better solution would be to make it impossible to "mine" crypto currency on GPUs. And also for game development studios to get their act together and stop pumping out silly games that have no "substance" and only flashy graphics (Cyberpuke and Crysis come to mind here?) I don't even want to go into this rabbit hole, but I think gaming has seen very little advancement in the last 10 years, in terms of gameplay. It's mostly the same games getting recycled over and over each year, but just with slight improvement in the visuals (but at the expense of requiring more processing / GPU power.) On the other side, it should also be noted that many research facilities use a modified version of these modern GPUs to do large data processing and AI. So perhaps we will never see an end to this madness. However, the gaming industry and crypto craze sure are the ones adding most fuel to the fire... and in this case, that statement is not even a pun, since many places' electric power does come from fossil fuel sources (or at least some portion of it.)
Just my (additional) $0.02.Leave a comment:
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Re: Radeon RX 7900 Series Launched
The reason video cards keep getting bigger and bigger is because of the ever-increasing TDP requirements. These top-end GPUs can use (dissipate into heat)... what is it now, upwards of 300 Watts? And all of that in 400-600 mm^2 of surface area. That's probably more heat output per surface area than my 75 Watt soldering station. So just think about it for a second!Probably sooner than later, that gag picture I posted above about the RTX 4090 may even become a reality.
And the way things keep going, I'm just surprised why manufacturers haven't ditched the whole concept of video cards being considered as "add-on" cards. IMO, they should have switched the design a long time ago, where you can mount a CPU tower cooler onto the GPU die... though with 300+ Watts of power, I think even many of the high-end CPU "tower" coolers would have a hard time getting rid of this much heat.
Maybe the better solution would be to make it impossible to "mine" crypto currency on GPUs. And also for game development studios to get their act together and stop pumping out silly games that have no "substance" and only flashy graphics (Cyberpuke and Crysis come to mind here?) I don't even want to go into this rabbit hole, but I think gaming has seen very little advancement in the last 10 years, in terms of gameplay. It's mostly the same games getting recycled over and over each year, but just with slight improvement in the visuals (but at the expense of requiring more processing / GPU power.) On the other side, it should also be noted that many research facilities use a modified version of these modern GPUs to do large data processing and AI. So perhaps we will never see an end to this madness. However, the gaming industry and crypto craze sure are the ones adding most fuel to the fire... and in this case, that statement is not even a pun, since many places' electric power does come from fossil fuel sources (or at least some portion of it.)Last edited by momaka; 01-09-2023, 06:21 PM.Leave a comment:
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Re: Radeon RX 7900 Series Launched
Just throwing in my $0.02.
IMO, the physical size of GPUs this gen is getting entirely out of hand. 4 to 5 slots for a single GPU? Insanity!Leave a comment:
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Re: Radeon RX 7900 Series Launched
I'm still on Intel UHD Graphics 630. It does fine for what I'm doing. My laptop has an Nvidia T1000 (not a Terminator), but I don't need the extra performance compared to Intel graphics.Leave a comment:
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Re: Radeon RX 7900 Series Launched
4090s are nice but I got my 3080 founds at MSRP over a year ago and it works great for my needs. I thought about a 7900 card but hearing about the problems with the units I will probably wait for the next gen before I do anything which at that point I will have to replace my whole AM4 system and go to AM5.Leave a comment:
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Re: Radeon RX 7900 Series Launched
If anything I've learnt, as long as I don't pair these with a AMD FX furnace, they do incredibly well on most platforms I've tested them on - X58+i7 920, H55+i3 540, P55 (MSI)+ i5 750, P55+i7 860 and Z68+i7 2600k. All did well with all three GPUs, running Win10 LTSC IoT on a 320GB Seagate 7200.6 laptop drive.
The only machine I've seen them literally choke on is a FX-4100 over a 880GM-UD2H. That chip is a literal waste of sillicon, and I hate myself for not being smart enough to avoid it and go for a Phenom.Leave a comment:
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Re: Radeon RX 7900 Series Launched
Oh by the way, I saw this awhile back on eBay. Don't remember if I posted it here or not already (please excuse me if I did), as I've been a goner for a while... but here it is anyways:
Clearly a joke, but I though quite funny.
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And man, I've really been gone a while, haven't I - it took me a few good moments to remember how to upload images on here againLeave a comment:
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Re: Radeon RX 7900 Series Launched
Originally posted by shovenoseWhat are others plans this go-around?
I just get cheap junk video cards when they are extra cheap (i.e. scrap value).
I bought a Radeon HD5830 (ROP-castrated HD5870) several years back for about $15 total (with shipping) to my door. Used it for about 1 or maybe 1.5 years now doing some light gaming on it (30-50% GPU load max) and kept the temperatures fairly low (as low as a HD5830 would stay, LOL.) It just died last month "out of the blue" after I forgot to turn on MSI Afterburner to keep the fan speeds cranked up to keep it cool. Oh well, no big loss. Just the cooler alone from that card is worth the $15 I paid for it.
Funny thing is, just the week before my HD5830 died, I purchased another card off of eBay - this time, an HD7570 branded by HP/Pegatron. It was a salvaged card from a recycled PC. Looked dirty AF. Figured it be a quick restoration job. Wanted to get it to see how much power it uses and how hot it runs with its stock Pegatron cooler, as I want to eventually get another HD7570 for an SFF machine. Anyways, long story short, that Pegatron HD7570 turned out to be a little more than a quick restoration projects, missing close to 20 random SMDs on the back. But an hour or two later repairing some ripped tracks and putting back those ripped SMDs, it came back to life. And it runs surprisingly cool with the stock Pegatron cooler. Go figure! Anyways, just the next day after I got it working and tested is when my HD5830 failed. So all of that effort wasn't in vain - I got my "gaming PC" back up and running in no time... and for only $13. Sure the HD7570 may not be as powerful as the HD5830... but in Fortnite (the only "modern" game I care to play nowadays), it doesn't make a difference, since that game cares mostly about the CPU and not GPU. Otherwise, I'd have swapped that GPU with something better.
My current best (working) video card is a HIS Radeon HD7950 3 GB... and it's sitting in a drawer. I used it for a bit, but haven't played too many games lately that would require this kind of power (quite literally.) And Fortnite doesn't care for its better capabilities, at least with the rest of the system it's used with. In my case, the bottleneck is with the CPU (Xeon E5649)... or rather, Fortnite/Epic just being poorly coded and not wanting to utilize all of the cores properly (only ~30% CPU utilization total.) Meh, whatever. Not like I have that much time for gaming anymore either (once or twice a week tops.)
Then again, so are all of the HD7k series too, including my HD7950. The HD7570 is an exception, though, being a 40 nm "Turks" core - same exact thing as the HD6570. So it's really a HD6k series card, and much more reliable. HD5k is also not bad, but they run a little hotter.
Unfortunately, all of the above also fail quite frequently... but only if used with the stock or inadequate coolers. Unlike modern video cards, which just literally "burn through" their silicone (no really, they do - think about how much silicon there is in a single transistor at sub-10 nm technology compared to the old stuff), the old cards can last quite a bit when cooled properly.
I'm personally more of a fan of older mid-range cards like the Radeon 9600 (for Win98 and early XP games) along with HD4650/4670 for late XP era games.
wait for it...
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Intel "Extreme Graphics" 2 onboard...i.e. the good ol' i865 chipset with built-in graphics on a P4 system. LOL!
FWIW, the HD6770 you have will still play some modern e-sports titles decently well (Rocket League, Fortnite, CS:GO, and some older COD titles.)Last edited by momaka; 01-01-2023, 12:57 AM.Leave a comment:
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Re: Radeon RX 7900 Series Launched
Yeah, the R9 280 does run HOT, I have reflowed several to repair them. In fact I have a reflowed one floating around right now that nobody even wants for like $25 on eBay. It's funny, during the great GPU shortage, I was selling them like hotcakes for $$$ and now they're basically e-waste.Leave a comment:
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Re: Radeon RX 7900 Series Launched
I don't think this gen sucks, it's just badly priced. You need one that says
I'm good for what I have
I have a 3080 I got at the trailing edge of the inflation for like $1200. Works for meLeave a comment:
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Re: Radeon RX 7900 Series Launched
I have a R9 280 (VTX3D flashed to MSI) and a 7870 GHz Edition. Both still rip games.
Admittedly, the R9 280 is a literal 8800GTX competitor cooling wise. Even the 7870 runs much cooler.Leave a comment:
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Re: Radeon RX 7900 Series Launched
I am still using the Radeon 6770 from Gigabyte. It is capable of COMPLETELY passive cooling, it's HUGE and has fins like a motorcycle. And since I hung a 120mm fan with some 20-gauge wire, the solder won't expand and contract and wear out. It should last a very, VERY long time. If it fails, I have a Radeon 7770 completely passive cooled card in a box somewhere in my basement.
I don't understand why we even need so much power -- I just surf the net, check e-mail and do basic budgeting for my household.
EDIT: Mageia did not have a driver for this card for several years a while back, but Mageia locked up more than one computer at my house the last time I tried it. I can always use Mint or Ubuntu if I need an alternative to elderly Windows 7.Last edited by Hondaman; 12-21-2022, 11:52 AM.Leave a comment:
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Re: Radeon RX 7900 Series Launched
The previously mentioned 4090; which I was referring to 'spending that much on a GPU', in which you replied. No idea what you gave for the one you got.Leave a comment:
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Re: Radeon RX 7900 Series Launched
I just picked up an RTX3070 when they were marked down to $450, and it does everything I need it to, so I should be good for a while. It may change once the prices start to drop (and supplies of last gen cards dry up), but as of now the current generation isn't all that appealing given that the price increases almost match the performance increases (admittedly AMD isn't as bad as NVidia in this realm).Leave a comment:
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Re: Radeon RX 7900 Series Launched
Who's spending $2K on a GPU? The Tesla M40 I got used for dirt cheap during the great GPU unavailability and the RX 7900 XT was $900? Where did $2K come from? lolLast edited by shovenose; 12-19-2022, 12:59 PM.Leave a comment:
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Re: Radeon RX 7900 Series Launched
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Re: Radeon RX 7900 Series Launched
well... im picking the fifth option: i dont upgrade my gpu anymore. modern gpus stink and just suck! radeon 9800 pro 4tw! gf 6800 ultra 4tw! 9800gtx, gts 250 4tw! radeon 3870 agp 4tw!
yepp! cryptocurrency is absolutely having its own ass handed to it with all the crypto scams, embezzlement and crime busts going on. looks like cryptocurrency has reached its peak and its time to move on to the next big thing. i really envy those guys who put money in crypto early on when it was basically worthless. i watched a documentary about the crypto universe called "inside the crypto kingdom" and someone once paid 10,000 bitcoins for a pizza back then when it was worthless. imagine just how much those 10k bitcoins were worth when crypto was at its peak! just do the math yourself!
fwah, man!! your gpu manhood is getting bigger and longer nowadays!no further comment as the language here must be g-rated unless its the vip room...
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