What I get is: "Forbidden You don't have permission to access /short/images/pch-RV630XT.jpg on this server."Works just fine.
Hmm..It starts to look like that R600 has 16 TMU's so RV630 might be:I believe 160 (32) is correct. That is just an inference based on the fact G84 is 1/4 (or slightly greater in some specs) of G80. If the R600 is slower than the GTX, or rather on-par with the GTS (~3/4 spec GTX), at least at this point driver-wise, and the 2600 is supposedly slightly faster than the 86GTS, it would seem to make the most sense.
That being said, I initially believed it was 1/4 R600, therefore 80 (16), but that was under the assumption there will be a "mid-life kicker" similar to RV560. If that part doesn't exist, which it may not, it would make sense X2600 would have those specs from the start.
It seems very likely to me.Hmm..It starts to look like that R600 has 16 TMU's so RV630 might be:
32-8-8.
We already know it's a "huge" chip, it's ~160mm2 on 65nm. If it was on 80nm it would be well over 200mm2, far bigger than G84.But the thing is it would be pretty huge chip as R600 is what - around 700M.
They must have crippled it further somehow.
Well it's fine with me. It does make sence as it would leave 48-12-12 for that Laka thing. Wonder how those 8 TMU's hold it back? The pixel pushing power should be pretty impressive, especially if it's clocked > 700mhz. The rumours have been going up to 800.It seems very likely to me.
We already know it's a "huge" chip, it's ~160mm2 on 65nm. If it was on 80nm it would be well over 200mm2, far bigger than G84.
Similarly, RV610, which is seemingly exactly 50% the size of RV630 (judging from vaguely fuzzy pix), would appear to be destined to be 16-4-4. This is the only ATI GPU that's looking to be significantly smaller than its direct competitor.
Though you could argue that R600 is notably smaller than G80 and NVIO combined.
Jawed
Yeah - if it's fully 1/2 R600 and clocked at 800MHz you'd have to think it comfortably has the measure of G84.
Well, the 8600 has the same 128-bit bus, so that is not an issue in terms of the head to head.
Still sucks though, don't it? Was expecting 256 on the midrange by now.
I think you'll find it is board complexity and manufacturing cost that has dictated the use of 128-bit buses on these cards.
I wonder how much UVD & Audio department of the chip eat space, since they eat the same transistor amount on each 3 chips, R600, RV630 and RV610
Ooh! Where did you get those die sizes from, that's very much more definite than we've seen before!Obviously not very much if RV610 retains the 128-bit bus of RV630, and half the other specs, with ~54% the die size on the same process (82mm² vs 153mm²).
It seems likely. Though I was also vaguely under the impression that RV610's UVD wouldn't be capable of the highest bitrates at 1080p.That's one of the reasons I believe at least part of that has to been done off the main ASIC of RV610 and possibley RV630.
Ooh! Where did you get those die sizes from, that's very much more definite than we've seen before!
It seems likely. Though I was also vaguely under the impression that RV610's UVD wouldn't be capable of the highest bitrates at 1080p.
Jawed