Palit GeForce GTX 470 Dual Fan Cooler review

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Reference Specifications

 

Reference Specifications

So let's have a look at the reference technology first. NVIDIA released two high-end class DirectX 11 capable products. First off, the new graphics adapters are of course DirectX 11 ready. With Windows 7 and Vista also being DX11 ready all we need are some games to take advantage of DirectCompute, multi-threading, Hardware Tessellation and new shader 5.0 extensions. DX11 is going to be good, and once tessellation kicks into games, much better looking.

  • GeForce GTX 480 : 480 SP, 384-bit, 250W TDP, US$ 449~499
  • GeForce GTX 470 : 448 SP, 320-bit, 225W TDP, US$ 299~349
  • GeForce GTX 465 : 352 SP, 256-bit, 200W TDP, US$ 279~289

Some of you will say "huh?" as everybody expected 512 shader processors on the top of the line model, 272 cores more than the GT200 (GeForce GTX 280/285). We were as much surprised as you guys when we learned that it turned out to be 480 shader processors for the GeForce GTX 480. See, the Fermi architecture, the GF100 graphics processor has sixteen shader clusters embedded in it (called SMs). For the GeForce GTX 480 one such a cluster is disabled, and on the GeForce GTX 470 (though expected) two are disabled.

GeForce GTX series 400GeForce GTX series 400

The GeForce GTX 400 cards have the Fermi family chip embedded on them. That chip is called GF100. The GF100 GPU is placed onto an 8-layer PCB and tied to gDDR5 memory. On the topic of graphics memory; NVIDIA made their memory controller GDDR5 compatible, which was not the case on GT200 based GeForce GTX 260/275/285/295, hence their GDDR3 memory.

Memory wise we see exemplary large numbers, as we are passing 1 GB. Each utilized memory controller on the respective GPU will get 256MB of memory tied to it.

  • The GTX 465 has four memory controllers (4x256MB) = 1024 MB of GDDR5 memory
  • The GTX 470 has five memory controllers (5x256MB) = 1280 MB of GDDR5 memory
  • The GTX 480 has six memory controllers (6x256MB) = 1536 MB of GDDR5 memory

As you can understand, the massive memory partitions, bus-width and combination of GDDR5 memory (quad data rate) allows the GPU to work with a very high framebuffer bandwidth. So we've had a chat about the GF100 GPU and memory. It's now time to break down the GPU clocks:

GeForce GTX 465

 

So the GeForce GTX 480 has a big fat memory partition alright, 1,54 GB of GDDR5 memory which is tied to a 384-bit memory bus that binds to six memory controllers inside the GPU; six memory controllers x 64-bit = 384-bit. This memory is clocked at 924 MHz (= 3696 MHz effective).

For the GeForce GTX 470 that would be five memory controllers x 64-bit = 320-bit. The GTX 470 memory will be clocked at 837 MHz (= 3348 MHz effective).

Core frequencies then. The GeForce GTX 480 will have its core clocked at 700 MHz and its shader processors at 1400 MHz. The GeForce GTX 470 on its end will be clocked lower at 607 MHz on the core and 1215 MHz on the shader processors.

What's also interesting about the GTX 400 release, but was a challenge, is the move towards a smaller die and fabrication process (40nm) which often brings several advantages. One advantage is that you can insert more transistors into the silicon; as such the GF100 GPU comes with 3 billion transistors embedded into this GPU.

Despite a smaller die however, TDPs are relatively high, the GTX 480 will consume at maximum 250 Watts whereas the GTX 470 is using as much as the last generation product, roughly 225W.

The GeForce GTX 480 comes with both a 6-pin and 8-pin power connector to get enough current and a little spare for overclocking. This boils down as: 8-pin PEG = 150W + 6-pin PEG = 75W + PCIe slot = 75W is 300W available.

The GeForce GTX 470 comes with two 6-pin PEG connectors each delivering 75W and another 75W over the PCIe slot = 225W. The GeForce GTX 480 targets a price point around $449-499, while the GeForce GTX 470 is expected to be priced $299-$349.

I want to leave it at that for the physical tech side of the GPU and now move forwards to the photo shoot and other things like DirectX 11 and, quite specifically, Tessellation. First up the photo's, then our standard snippet on GPU and shader technology to help you understand how a graphics card actually works. 3

But now that non-reference product from Palit. As stated, Palit often tries to do things a little bit different and as such puts our SKUs with some sort of unique cooling.

This GeForce GTX 470 has 448 CUDA cores, 1,280MB of GDDR5 memory and support for 3-way SLI multi-GPU setups and 3D Vision Surround. As for actual frequencies surprisingly Palit stuck to reference clock frequencies; the GPU operates at 607MHz, whereas the shaders and memory are clocked at 1,215MHz and 3,348MHz respectively.

The video controller uses, obviously, a different cooling mechanism, specifically a dual-slot cooler with four copper heatpipes, a copper base and two active fans. But let's have a look at the product in more detail.

Palit GeForce GTX 465

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