xxmorpheus
Member
I have dual gtx 690. Would it help physx performance to add a dedicated gtx 680 in addition? Is this possible?
I have dual gtx 690. Would it help physx performance to add a dedicated gtx 680 in addition? Is this possible?
690 SLI is considered 4 way SLI since there are 4 GPUs in the system.
A dedicated Physx card might give you a performance boost but it would be so small that it wouldn't be worth it at all. Keep the 690s till you want to jump to a newer generation all together.
Yes it would help. The CUDA cores on the quad 690 sli would be freed up for Physx used on the 680, but as I said in previous post, you may be offsetting that performance increase by the reduction in PCIe lanes that you're limited to with a 2700K. Additionally, your PSU is already near capacity so it would not be a good idea.
The only way to tell would be to download 3DMark11 (which uses physx)
Run it the following benches 3 times and get the average:
- 2700K dedicated to Physx - 1 GTX 690
- 2700K dedicated to Physx - 2 x GTX 690 quad SLI
- 2700K - 1 x GTX 690 dedicated to PhysX, 1 x GTX 690 not in SLI.
- 2700K - 2 x GTX 690 quad SLI - 1 x GTX 680 dedicated to physx.
Post score from those runs (run them each 3 times and average the results).
BUT! If you have a watt meter or a multimeter to test the 12V rail, because without a doubt, 5 x 680 cores will max that PSU. I would want to see you put an additional Corsair 450W PSU to run the mobo as although this is marketed as a single rail PSU, its, not, it has 4 x 12 Vrails with OCP which may make it shut down if you added the GTX 680 so be careful.
My guess is that your loss of PCIe lanes will outweigh the physx component and your scaling in real world gaming will be terrible. My guess (if you do the bench) is around 30% loss in performance due to PCIe lanes (8x rather than 16x) vs about 15% increase due to physx in the games that support it and benchmarks. So I expect a 15% reduction in performance between 2 and 4.
That is however with the disclaimer around the PSU.
I just highly doubt that there would be any benefit at all from using a dedicated physx card. I couldnt imagine any current game being able to fully utilize 4 680 cores at all. Im sure he has ALOT of idle SPs if he is using vysnc.
Thats what I said, with the limited PCIe lanes, you will get around 15% reduction in performance.
But, what you are postulating isnt correct. You're removing the need to use cuda cores that can be used for graphics by adding an additional dedicated gpu. As shown here http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cbww3dhzK0M it needs to be powerful enough to match throughput of the GPU.
And shown here the PCIe lanes make a difference. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bjh8zerBbs8
So as I have said, yes, it makes a difference, but PCIe bandwidth will be reduced.
My experimental design above should show this.
Geez dude, you know how to complicate things. What is not shown there is the minimum FPS which is what is most important with Vsync. If that goes below 60FPS it will drop to 30FPS and so on .... Also, he doesn't use Vsync as he has said before because of this issue.
Ok. Says the guy running 2x780s and a dedicated physx card which to be honest is probably just draining the life of your power supply more than anything.
Phsyx is not the demon it used to be back in like 2004 or 2005 when it was introduced and REQUIRED a dedicated card. The cards today have no need for a secondary dedicated card.
Do you think before you type? How is two 780Tis and a 580 dragging 100A? I MEASURE the wattage at the wall and it doesn't go above 950W. So what "life" am I "dragging" out of my PSU? Care to explain the technical reasoning there? Either way it has a SEVEN year warranty. Me not worry.
Lets just wait till the OP comes back with numbers.
Well, the closer you are to the threshold of your PSU the shorter its lifespan will be. Is where Im getting at. Not to mention the increase of your electric bill.
Im not saying that you should worry at all about your PSU. Im sure its handling the load perfectly fine. What I am saying, is that your 580 is probably doing little to nothing 98% of the time. That or its taking so much load off your 780s that one of them are probably sitting idle most of the time.
I look at it this way. There is a difference between wanting the ultimate amount of power from currently existing technology, and making practical use of that power. I dont see a practical use for 2 x 690s and a dedicated 680.
Iv never owned a high end system? When I built my system, it was all top of the line stuff. So Im not sure where your getting at.
Again.. sigh.. stop making assumptions, go and read, learn and get yourself into a position of knowledge.
A PSU runs at its best, at around 90% load. That is when it is most efficient (my PSU is GOLD so it doesn't matter), so your claim that it increases my electricity bill is virtually laughable. The PSU will PREFER to be at 90% than at 40% load. That is one of the reasons I added the 580 as the system was built and designed around a GTX580 tri-SLI system. 2 x 780Ti plus a 580 is about the same.
The 580 does very little when im not gaming with physx or doing uni work, or bench marking, or bit coin mining, or using it to render videos and so on.... but its not 98%, and even then, when idle, it uses less than 100W.
Finally it appears your argument is this: "people with money shit me because in my view they waste it" is arrogant in the extreme. I do fluid dynamics and AI at uni, i use my PPU all the time, i gave a solid argument to Xmorpheus regarding the pros and cons, and all you have done is said "i don't like it" amongst other nonsense and assumptions.
Please wait for the OP. In the meantime, i leave you this AX1200 picture![]()
So your powersupply consumes MORE power at 40% load than at 90% load? Hmm... I would probably invest in a different power supply then. Thats pretty INefficient if you ask me.
No, its an efficiency curve. Look mate lets take this offline into PM, you clearly have no idea.