Power Consumption (Idle and Gaming)
Putting a realistic, repeatable load on a GPU to get a decent idea of its real world power consumption and thermal output has long been something with which we've experimented here at
bit-tech. We've found that synthetic benchmarks such as FurMark thrash the GPU constantly, which simply isn't reflective of how a GPU will be used when gaming.
It's such a hardcore test that any GPU under scrutiny is almost guaranteed to hit its thermal limit; the mark at which the card's firmware will kick in, speeding up the fan to keep the GPU within safe temperature limits. Conversely, simply leaving a game such as Crysis running at a certain point also isn't reflective of real-world use. There's no guarantee that the GPU is being pushed as hard as other titles might push it, and the load will vary between play-throughs.
We used to use the Canyon Flight test of 3DMark 06, as this was a punishing and repeatable test. However, we've now adopted
Unigine's Heaven 3.0 benchmark, as its DirectX 11 features will stress all the parts of a modern GPU. Using our regular Unigine benchmark settings, we watch the power draw from the wall between the grass field scene and the second dragon scene - this is the toughest portion of the test for both Nvidia and AMD hardware.
-
Nvidia GeForce GTX 660 2GB
-
AMD Radeon HD 7850 2GB
-
AMD Radeon HD 7870 2GB
-
AMD Radeon HD 7750 1GB
-
AMD Radeon HD 7770 1GB
-
Nvidia GeForce GTX 650 1GB
-
Nvidia GeForce GTX 650 Ti 1GB
-
Nvidia GeForce GTX 650 Ti Boost 2GB
-
98
-
99
-
100
-
104
-
104
-
105
-
106
-
107
System Power consumption in Watts
-
AMD Radeon HD 7750 1GB
-
Nvidia GeForce GTX 650 1GB
-
AMD Radeon HD 7770 1GB
-
Nvidia GeForce GTX 650 Ti 1GB
-
AMD Radeon HD 7850 2GB
-
AMD Radeon HD 7870 2GB
-
Nvidia GeForce GTX 660 2GB
-
Nvidia GeForce GTX 650 Ti Boost 2GB
-
144
-
161
-
167
-
186
-
196
-
216
-
230
-
231
System Power consumption in Watts
Thermal Performance (Idle and Gaming)
We also have GPU-Z running in the background, and leave the Unigine benchmark running for ten minutes to record a peak GPU temperature. We present the temperature as a delta T (the difference between the temperature of the GPU and the ambient temperature in our labs).
-
AMD Radeon HD 7870 2GB
-
Nvidia GeForce GTX 650 Ti 1GB
-
Nvidia GeForce GTX 660 2GB
-
Nvidia GeForce GTX 650 Ti Boost 2GB
-
AMD Radeon HD 7770 1GB
-
AMD Radeon HD 7750 1GB
-
Nvidia GeForce GTX 650 1GB
Delta T in °C
-
Nvidia GeForce GTX 650 Ti 1GB
-
Nvidia GeForce GTX 650 1GB
-
AMD Radeon HD 7870 2GB
-
Nvidia GeForce GTX 660 2GB
-
AMD Radeon HD 7750 1GB
-
AMD Radeon HD 7770 1GB
-
Nvidia GeForce GTX 650 Ti Boost 2GB
Delta T in °C
*as there's no stock model of the HD 7850 2GB, and we do not have a stock HD 7790 1GB model, these cards are not included in these graphs.
Read our
performance analysis.
Want to comment? Please log in.