Message boards : Number crunching : Non-GPU Factors
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I was wondering how factors such as ram speed, channels, pcie bandwidth, solid state drives, processor/chipsets effect our GPU crunching speed. | |
ID: 39321 | Rating: 0 | rate: / Reply Quote | |
I moved my GTX 660s from a P45 motherboard with an E8400 dual-core (3 GHz) to a Haswell i7-4790 on a Z97 motherboard with no observable change in speed (both with SSDs), if that gives you any indication. I think if you went to a x4 PCIe slot you might see some reduction, but otherwise any differences would be hard to find. | |
ID: 39324 | Rating: 0 | rate: / Reply Quote | |
I was wondering how factors such as ram speed, channels, pcie bandwidth, solid state drives, processor/chipsets effect our GPU crunching speed. ram speed: not much if any channels: no pcie bandwidth: PCIe 2.0 x8 or above = no difference, x4 = a little slowdown (PCIe 3.0 x4 should be full speed) solid state drives: not at all processor/chipsets: lets just say that a 1.8GHz dual core Celeron on a cheapo mini ITX MB runs a 750Ti at full speed with 2 CPU apps running (on a PCIe 2.0 x8 slot no less) | |
ID: 39333 | Rating: 0 | rate: / Reply Quote | |
Update: I upgraded my computers memory from 1333Mhz to 1600Mhz, my cpu from a fx-6300 to an i7-4790k, and my motherboard from a MSI GD80 (chipset 990fx) To MSI Gaming 7 (chipset z97), I went from pcie 2.0 x16 to 3.0 x16. | |
ID: 39418 | Rating: 0 | rate: / Reply Quote | |
Your hardware performance gain (of around 10%) was lost when you went from XP to W8.1. | |
ID: 39420 | Rating: 0 | rate: / Reply Quote | |
My computer is primarily a gaming rig :D. As much as I would like to load a second os system and let it run all the time while I'm away, my parents would freak out about the power bill. Once I'm off to college living in a dorm room, I'll be sure to run it all the time. | |
ID: 39451 | Rating: 0 | rate: / Reply Quote | |
Your hardware performance gain (of around 10%) was lost when you went from XP to W8.1. Why exactly is XP faster than Win 8.1 (or 7...)? ____________ | |
ID: 39456 | Rating: 0 | rate: / Reply Quote | |
With Vista MS introduced a new display driver model, which encapsulates the GPU more. It makes it easier to avoid crashing the whole GUI or system in case of a graphics error, but this also means the GPU driver is "further away" from the actual hardware. Or put another way: the overhead for some GPU driver functions increased to gain stability. | |
ID: 39459 | Rating: 0 | rate: / Reply Quote | |
Message boards : Number crunching : Non-GPU Factors