Nvidia GeForce GTX Titan-Z review

Graphics cards 1048 Page 7 of 30 Published by

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Hardware Setup | Power Consumption

Hardware Installation

Installation of any of the Nvidia GeForce cards is really easy. Once the card is seated into the PC make sure you hook up the monitor and of course any external power connectors like 6 and/or 8-pin PEG power connectors. Preferably get yourself a power supply that has these PCIe PEG connectors natively (converting them from a Molex Peripheral connector anno 2014 is sooo 2008.

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 The next stage is to install the driver. We will be using the latest 340.43 Beta driver today.

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Once done, we boot into Windows, install the latest drivers and after a reboot all should be working. No further configuration is required or needed unless you like to tweak the settings, for which you can open the NVIDIA control panel.

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With SLI related changes always check in the Nv control panel whether or not the SLI Multi-GPU mode is enabled properly. The GeForce GTX Titan-Z might be a single card but it simply runs SLI on-board. 

Power Consumption

Let's have a look at how much power draw we measure with this graphics card installed. The methodology: We have a device constantly monitoring the power draw from the PC. We simply stress the GPU, not the processor. The before and after wattage will tell us roughly how much power a graphics card is consuming under load. Our test system is based on a power hungry six-core Intel Core i7-3960X Extreme Edition Sandy Bridge-E based setup on the X79 chipset platform. This setup is overclocked to 4.60 GHz on all cores. Next to that we have energy saving functions disabled for this motherboard and processor (to ensure consistent benchmark results). We'll be calculating the GPU power consumption here, not the total PC power consumption.

Measured power consumption

  1. System in IDLE = 138 Watts
  2. System Wattage with GPU in FULL Stress = 597 Watts
  3. Difference (GPU load) = 459 Watts
  4. Add average IDLE wattage ~20 Watts
  5. Subjective obtained GPU power consumption = ~ 479 Watts

Mind you, the system wattage is measured at the wall socket side and there are other variables like PSU power efficiency. So this is an estimated value, albeit a very good one. 

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Above, a chart of relative power consumption. Again, the Wattage shown is the card with the GPU(s) stressed 100%, showing only the peak GPU power draw, not the power consumption of the entire PC and not the average gaming power consumption.

Power consumption  TDP in KWh KWh price 2 hrs day 4 hrs day
Graphics card measured TDP 0.479 0.23 0.22 0.44
         
Cost 5 days per week / 4 hrs day € 2.20      
Cost per Month € 9.55      
Cost per Year 5 days week / 4 hrs day / € 114.58      
Cost per Year 5 days week / 4 hrs day / $ $ 151.24      

Here is Guru3D's power supply recommendation:

  • GeForce GTX Titan Z - On your average system the card requires you to have a 850 Watt power supply unit.
  • GeForce GTX Tian Z 2-way SLI - On your average system the cards require you to have a 1200 Watt power supply unit as minimum.

If you are going to overclock your GPU or processor, then we do recommend you purchase something with some more stamina.

There are many good PSUs out there, please do have a look at our many PSU reviews as we have loads of recommended PSUs for you to check out in there. What could happen if your PSU can't cope with the load is:

  • Bad 3D performance
  • Crashing games
  • Spontaneous reset or imminent shutdown of the PC
  • Freezing during gameplay
  • PSU overload can cause it to break down

Let's move to the next page where we'll look into GPU heat levels and noise levels coming from this graphics card.

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