Did you come up with this number by adding up all the W's for all the transistors involved in power gating?
Yeah, but even they must have arrived at those numbers by some method. Would you care to specify how they came up with that number?No, by reading ISSCC papers.
The photos contain technical clues or raise technical questions.PS: Would mindfury stop posting pictures. This is a forum, not a freaking photo gallery...
The photos contain technical clues or raise technical questions.
e.g.
appears to indicate that GTX480's heatsink is one piece of metal moulded to be a tight fit not just to the graphics chip but the entire PCB! Additionally, rather than covering the heatsink in plastic as in say HD5870, to form a wind tunnel, this uses the heatsink's shape to form a substantial proportion of the wind tunnel plus it allows the card to radiate some heat into the space around the card, rather than being "insulated" by the plastic of a conventional cooler's wind tunnel.
Well, that's my interpretation, anyway.
Jawed
Add to that the corrugation to increase metal surface area and the thickness of the heatpipes and it is clear that nVIDIA has made great effort to make fermi run cool an quiet.
Uh, I'd be willing to bet the cover was taken off for the pictures. I'd be willing to bet that overall cooling would be harmed by taking the cover off (since the fan would no longer be blowing air across the entire heat sink).Or alternately, the chip runs really hot and a massive heatsink and very powerful fan is required to cool the thing. I'm surprised that the heatsink need to be uncovered so a lot of heat/air is vented into the case instead of being vented outside. Obviously that was required to get enough cooling out of an already massive heatsink, and that explains the special Fermi cases designed with Nvidia to cool the card.
Uh, I'd be willing to bet the cover was taken off for the pictures. I'd be willing to bet that overall cooling would be harmed by taking the cover off (since the fan would no longer be blowing air across the entire heat sink).
Looks like a 92x38mm centrifugal unit with PWM control. Dense fin arrangement and 6mm heat pipes give a clue to TDP. Centrifugal fans are good at maintaining high static pressure through the shroud. No real reason for it to be overly loud, but that also depends on bearing type & heatsink efficiency. The 480 has an extruded HS top that fits through the shroud for additional dissipation, but it's likely just style over substance.I'm more worried by the smaller diameter of the fan unit and the densely placed fins, compared to previous reference designs -- it all asks for more noise?!
Aye!The photos contain technical clues or raise technical questions.
It's not one piece. You can't cast fins as thin as those. It's a die-cast base like we've seen for several years now (which might actually be a vapor chamber), with thin fins soldered to a copper heatspreader that mates to direct-contact heatpipes like seen with the fermi 470 pictures already. Then there's another die-cast top plate soldered or perhaps simply glued on top of the fins... The top plate could possibly be metallized plastic also, but it looks metal-y to me at least in those pics.appears to indicate that GTX480's heatsink is one piece of metal moulded to be a tight fit not just to the graphics chip but the entire PCB!
Yes, it's really clever! I wonder why this hasn't been done before (probably because it simply hasn't been neccessary until now!) Just don't reach inside your PC while the GPU is working... You don't want to brush your hands up to a 70+C metal surface!this uses the heatsink's shape to form a substantial proportion of the wind tunnel plus it allows the card to radiate some heat into the space around the card, rather than being "insulated" by the plastic of a conventional cooler's wind tunnel.
Uh, I'd be willing to bet the cover was taken off for the pictures. I'd be willing to bet that overall cooling would be harmed by taking the cover off (since the fan would no longer be blowing air across the entire heat sink).
Yes, it's really clever! I wonder why this hasn't been done before (probably because it simply hasn't been neccessary until now!) Just don't reach inside your PC while the GPU is working... You don't want to brush your hands up to a 70+C metal surface!
I suspect BZB was waxing negative about the lack of a plastic shroud over the heatsink, not the plastic bit around the fan that was removed for the photo shoot. The heatsink definitely looks robust which is fine but of all things that could be wrong with a graphics card a loud fan is near the top of my list.
Looks like a 92x38mm centrifugal unit with PWM control. Dense fin arrangement and 6mm heat pipes give a clue to TDP. Centrifugal fans are good at maintaining high static pressure through the shroud. No real reason for it to be overly loud, but that also depends on bearing type & heatsink efficiency. The 480 has an extruded HS top that fits through the shroud for additional dissipation, but it's likely just style over substance.
Yes, it's really clever! I wonder why this hasn't been done before (probably because it simply hasn't been neccessary until now!) Just don't reach inside your PC while the GPU is working... You don't want to brush your hands up to a 70+C metal surface!