GeForce 9800 GTX and 3-way SLI: May the nForce Be With You
by Derek Wilson on April 1, 2008 9:00 AM EST- Posted in
- GPUs
Power Consumption
Final Words
So, now that we have the 9800 GTX in the mix, what has changed? Honestly, not as much in terms of performance stack as in price. Yes, the 8800 Ultra is better than the 9800 GTX where memory bandwidth is a factor, but other than that the relationship of the 9800 GTX to the 3870X2 is largely the same. Of course, NVIDIA would never sell 8800 Ultra below the 3870X2 price of $400 (the binned 90nm G80 glued on there didn’t come cheap).
The smaller die size of the G92 based 9800 GTX takes away one victory AMD had over NVIDIA: the more expensive 8800 Ultra was slower than AMD’s top of the line. Without significantly improving (and sometimes hurting) performance over the 8800 Ultra (because they didn’t really need to with the 9800 GX2 in their pocket), NVIDIA has brought more competition to AMD’s lineup, which is definitely not something they will be happy about.
It is nice to have this card come in at the $300 price point with decent performance, but the most exciting thing about it is the fact that picking up two of them will give you better performance than a single 9800 GX2 for the same amount of money. Two of them can even start to get by in Crysis with Very High settings (though it might offer a better experience with one or two features turned down a bit).
While our very limited and rocky experience with 3-way SLI may have been tainted by the engineering sample board we used, the fact that we can get near 9800 GX2 Quad SLI performance for 3/4 of the costs is definitely a good thing. The fact this set up MUST be run in an nForce board is a drawback, as we would love to test in a system that can run every configuration under the sun. We’re getting closer with Skulltrail, and we aren’t missing the fact that there are concerns among our readers over its use. But we’re confident that we can push performance up and turn it into our workhorse for graphics, especially now that the VSYNC issue has been cleared up.
While testing this group of cards has been difficult with all the problems we experienced, we are very happy to have a solid explanation for what was causing our decreased performance we were seeing. Now all we need is an explanation for why forcing VSYNC off in the driver causes such a huge performance hit.
49 Comments
View All Comments
AggressorPrime - Tuesday, April 1, 2008 - link
Yes, it seems like some spaces are omitted.Rolphus - Tuesday, April 1, 2008 - link
None of the graphs work for me, on any page. IE6 and Opera 9.5 Beta.Just thought you should know :)
Rolphus - Tuesday, April 1, 2008 - link
Holy huge images, batman ;)I'm sure you're working on that though!
AggressorPrime - Tuesday, April 1, 2008 - link
Looks like everything is now fixed. Thank you Anandtech for another excellent review.AggressorPrime - Tuesday, April 1, 2008 - link
I spoke too soon, first image on page 5 is still broken.pervisanathema - Tuesday, April 1, 2008 - link
Where are the graphs on the final page?RamarC - Tuesday, April 1, 2008 - link
quote: where are the graphs?answer: probably where a $160 hd 3870 is--coming real soon now. (or at least should be!)
Ryan Smith - Tuesday, April 1, 2008 - link
We had an image upload problem, it's being worked on at the moment.Thatguy97 - Monday, May 11, 2015 - link
Man 2008 was a mess stuck with my 8880 gtx sli for 2 years