geforce 1080 vs 1070
Moderator: Site Moderators
Forum rules
Please read the forum rules before posting.
Please read the forum rules before posting.
geforce 1080 vs 1070
hi
I am looking for upgrading my geforce 970 since it is a bit old.
I am in doubt which chip I should focus on (eg 1080 or 1070).
I am using my computer for a few games as well but they dont max out either chips so the most important is folding@home performance. It should be mention that I pay around 0.3 dollar pr kW
I am looking for upgrading my geforce 970 since it is a bit old.
I am in doubt which chip I should focus on (eg 1080 or 1070).
I am using my computer for a few games as well but they dont max out either chips so the most important is folding@home performance. It should be mention that I pay around 0.3 dollar pr kW
-
- Posts: 2040
- Joined: Sat Dec 01, 2012 3:43 pm
- Hardware configuration: Folding@Home Client 7.6.13 (1 GPU slots)
Windows 7 64bit
Intel Core i5 2500k@4Ghz
Nvidia gtx 1080ti driver 441
Re: geforce 1080 vs 1070
I would recommend a GTX 1070 because it is only 10% slower than GTX 1080 in folding but price is 450$ instead of 700$.
Compared to GTX 970 the GTX 1070 will be twice as fast, 2xPPD at same 200W power.
Do not use the founders edition because custom designs keep the GPU cooler which allows max boost clock and are silent.
Compared to GTX 970 the GTX 1070 will be twice as fast, 2xPPD at same 200W power.
Do not use the founders edition because custom designs keep the GPU cooler which allows max boost clock and are silent.
-
- Posts: 69
- Joined: Sun Feb 28, 2016 10:06 pm
Re: geforce 1080 vs 1070
Might want to look at the AMD RX 480 coming out in a couple weeks as well. Two RX 480's look to be faster than a GTX 1070, will use the same power, and leave you with $50 or so for beer.
Dedicated to my grandparents who have passed away from Alzheimer's
Dedicated folding rig on Linux Mint 19.1:
2 - GTX 980 OC +200
1 - GTX 980 Ti OC +20
4 - GTX 1070 FE OC +200
3 - GTX 1080 OC +140
1 - GTX 1080Ti OC +120
-
- Posts: 10179
- Joined: Thu Nov 29, 2007 4:30 pm
- Hardware configuration: Intel i7-4770K @ 4.5 GHz, 16 GB DDR3-2133 Corsair Vengence (black/red), EVGA GTX 760 @ 1200 MHz, on an Asus Maximus VI Hero MB (black/red), in a blacked out Antec P280 Tower, with a Xigmatek Night Hawk (black) HSF, Seasonic 760w Platinum (black case, sleeves, wires), 4 SilenX 120mm Case fans with silicon fan gaskets and silicon mounts (all black), a 512GB Samsung SSD (black), and a 2TB Black Western Digital HD (silver/black).
- Location: Arizona
- Contact:
Re: geforce 1080 vs 1070
But not the same heat output. Save the $50 plus a little for the AC bill in the summer.FldngForGrandparents wrote:Might want to look at the AMD RX 480 coming out in a couple weeks as well. Two RX 480's look to be faster than a GTX 1070, will use the same power, and leave you with $50 or so for beer.
And wait for some real world PPD numbers.
How to provide enough information to get helpful support
Tell me and I forget. Teach me and I remember. Involve me and I learn.
Tell me and I forget. Teach me and I remember. Involve me and I learn.
-
- Posts: 10179
- Joined: Thu Nov 29, 2007 4:30 pm
- Hardware configuration: Intel i7-4770K @ 4.5 GHz, 16 GB DDR3-2133 Corsair Vengence (black/red), EVGA GTX 760 @ 1200 MHz, on an Asus Maximus VI Hero MB (black/red), in a blacked out Antec P280 Tower, with a Xigmatek Night Hawk (black) HSF, Seasonic 760w Platinum (black case, sleeves, wires), 4 SilenX 120mm Case fans with silicon fan gaskets and silicon mounts (all black), a 512GB Samsung SSD (black), and a 2TB Black Western Digital HD (silver/black).
- Location: Arizona
- Contact:
Re: geforce 1080 vs 1070
This forum support people with problems associated with FAH. If you want information about overclocking brand new hardware, you'll have better luck on one of the overclocking forums or even from a simple google.
How to provide enough information to get helpful support
Tell me and I forget. Teach me and I remember. Involve me and I learn.
Tell me and I forget. Teach me and I remember. Involve me and I learn.
-
- Posts: 2040
- Joined: Sat Dec 01, 2012 3:43 pm
- Hardware configuration: Folding@Home Client 7.6.13 (1 GPU slots)
Windows 7 64bit
Intel Core i5 2500k@4Ghz
Nvidia gtx 1080ti driver 441
Re: geforce 1080 vs 1070
No problem running a gtx 1070 together with a gtx 1080. Both share the same driver.
For optimal performance your PC should provide two pcie 3.0 8x speed slots and your power supply must be strong enough and add some case cooling.
For optimal performance your PC should provide two pcie 3.0 8x speed slots and your power supply must be strong enough and add some case cooling.
Re: geforce 1080 vs 1070
I would take the GTX 1070, I took it since I would be gaming on 1440p which is fine with that card.
Overclocked I pull about 780K PPD on average with spiked up to 980K ppd.
Overclocked I pull about 780K PPD on average with spiked up to 980K ppd.
-
- Posts: 94
- Joined: Wed Dec 05, 2007 10:23 pm
- Hardware configuration: Apple Mac Pro 1,1 2x2.66 GHz Dual-Core Xeon w/10 GB RAM | EVGA GTX 960, Zotac GTX 750 Ti | Ubuntu 14.04 LTS
Dell Precision T7400 2x3.0 GHz Quad-Core Xeon w/16 GB RAM | Zotac GTX 970 | Ubuntu 14.04 LTS
Apple iMac Retina 5K 4.00 GHz Core i7 w/8 GB RAM | OS X 10.11.3 (El Capitan) - Location: Michiana, USA
Re: geforce 1080 vs 1070
Interesting observation: I'm not too sure how critical it is to run these GTX cards with "late model CPU" and "pcie 3.0 8x" motherboards. I'm using the Ubuntu 14.04 LTS with the latest July NVIDIA drivers on my two Folding towers, a Mac Pro 1,1 and a Dell Precision T7400. The Dell has my EVGA GTX 1070 SuperClocked and (after some clever power harvesting) my EVGA 960. According to the NVIDIA settings program, both cards are using between 1 and 2 percent of the PCI-e 2.0 slots's bandwidth. The Mac Pro 1,1 has PCI-e 1.0, and over there the Zotac GTX 970 uses 2% of the bandwidth of the PCI-e 1.0 x16 slot but the Zotac GTX 750 Ti plugged into a PCI-e 1.0 x4 slot is using 25% of the bandwidth. That's all during Folding with Core18 and Core21 Clients.
Just a quick look with FAHControl on my iMac shows the follow PPD estimates:
Mac Pro w/2 2.66 GHz Dual-core Xeons - 352,956 PPD
* CPU (2 CPUs): PRCG 9036 (186, 8, 15) - 2,628 PPD
* GPU0 (Core x21 on GTX 970): PRCG 11706 (0,195, 93) - 303,463 PPD
* CPU1 (Core x18 on GTX 750 Ti): PRCG 9162 (81, 0, 446) - 46,865 PPD
Dell Precision T7400 w/2 3.0 GHz Quad-core Xeons - 858,239 PPD
* CPU (6 CPUs): PRCG 9033 (42,7,12) - 14,511 PPD
* GPU0 (Core x21 on GTX 1070): PRCG 13500 (0, 279, 2) - 685,739 PPD
* GPU1 (Core x21 on GTX 960): PRCG 13201 (23, 0, 190) - 157,989 PPD
My Mac Pro I've had Folding since April 2007, first with the beta multicore Client, and after Apple dropped support, I moved it over to 64-bit Ubuntu 14.04 LTS and added a GPU. It's still cranking out respectable numbers after all these years as the GPUs are the stars of Folding. Its biggest issue is the power for the GPU cards as there are only two 6-pin PCI-e VGA connectors available.
So, I maintain that you don't need the latest and greatest CPUs or Motherboard tech, just a solid power supply with plenty of 6-pin and 8-pin PCI-e VGA connectors and Maxwell and (now) Pascal boards. Just get out there and Fold!
Just a quick look with FAHControl on my iMac shows the follow PPD estimates:
Mac Pro w/2 2.66 GHz Dual-core Xeons - 352,956 PPD
* CPU (2 CPUs): PRCG 9036 (186, 8, 15) - 2,628 PPD
* GPU0 (Core x21 on GTX 970): PRCG 11706 (0,195, 93) - 303,463 PPD
* CPU1 (Core x18 on GTX 750 Ti): PRCG 9162 (81, 0, 446) - 46,865 PPD
Dell Precision T7400 w/2 3.0 GHz Quad-core Xeons - 858,239 PPD
* CPU (6 CPUs): PRCG 9033 (42,7,12) - 14,511 PPD
* GPU0 (Core x21 on GTX 1070): PRCG 13500 (0, 279, 2) - 685,739 PPD
* GPU1 (Core x21 on GTX 960): PRCG 13201 (23, 0, 190) - 157,989 PPD
My Mac Pro I've had Folding since April 2007, first with the beta multicore Client, and after Apple dropped support, I moved it over to 64-bit Ubuntu 14.04 LTS and added a GPU. It's still cranking out respectable numbers after all these years as the GPUs are the stars of Folding. Its biggest issue is the power for the GPU cards as there are only two 6-pin PCI-e VGA connectors available.
So, I maintain that you don't need the latest and greatest CPUs or Motherboard tech, just a solid power supply with plenty of 6-pin and 8-pin PCI-e VGA connectors and Maxwell and (now) Pascal boards. Just get out there and Fold!
Re: geforce 1080 vs 1070
I installed a Kraken G10 and a Kraken X31 AIO cooler on it to give it a constant 58degrees whilst being quite silent with these settings:Adam A. Wanderer wrote:Goodness!!! Have you had any stability or temperature problems with overclocking the 1070???1337LutZ wrote:I would take the GTX 1070, I took it since I would be gaming on 1440p which is fine with that card.
Overclocked I pull about 780K PPD on average with spiked up to 980K ppd.
Has anyone tried overclocking the 1080?
I only wish everyone had a late model CPU and a 1080! But, wishing never made it so. All we can do is what we
can do.
Are we any closer to solving the folding problem than we were when I started F@H about a decade or so ago? Will
we ever have enough computing power to bring this complex problem to solution? Perhaps "quantum computing" will
advance a solution, but that's a decade or two away from common use.
108% power limit
100% voltage boost (allowing for 1.09 volts)
+150mhz core
+700mhz memory
totalling a 2114mhz core clock whilst folding and 8972mhz memory clocks.
Core clock increased the PPD by a fair bit, but that 700mh memory clock added another 30-50k PPD! which was new to me, since usually memory does nothing.
-
- Posts: 2040
- Joined: Sat Dec 01, 2012 3:43 pm
- Hardware configuration: Folding@Home Client 7.6.13 (1 GPU slots)
Windows 7 64bit
Intel Core i5 2500k@4Ghz
Nvidia gtx 1080ti driver 441
Re: geforce 1080 vs 1070
@Foxbat: Interesting because on Windows the MSI Afterburner shows 50% bus usage with a gtx 970 on pcie 2.0 x8 which matches your pcie 1.0 x16 but you only get 2% bus usage.
Is your linux nvidia settings showing the right values? Or is bandwidth usage different in Windows or Linux?
If you want to do an experiment then switch the gtx 1070 and gtx 970 to see if the PPD changes on one of them.
Expected behavior in theory is gtx 970 gets 10% more PPD and gtx 1070 gets 50% lower PPD.
Is your linux nvidia settings showing the right values? Or is bandwidth usage different in Windows or Linux?
If you want to do an experiment then switch the gtx 1070 and gtx 970 to see if the PPD changes on one of them.
Expected behavior in theory is gtx 970 gets 10% more PPD and gtx 1070 gets 50% lower PPD.
-
- Posts: 94
- Joined: Wed Dec 05, 2007 10:23 pm
- Hardware configuration: Apple Mac Pro 1,1 2x2.66 GHz Dual-Core Xeon w/10 GB RAM | EVGA GTX 960, Zotac GTX 750 Ti | Ubuntu 14.04 LTS
Dell Precision T7400 2x3.0 GHz Quad-Core Xeon w/16 GB RAM | Zotac GTX 970 | Ubuntu 14.04 LTS
Apple iMac Retina 5K 4.00 GHz Core i7 w/8 GB RAM | OS X 10.11.3 (El Capitan) - Location: Michiana, USA
Re: geforce 1080 vs 1070
Yeah, good point. I guess I'm trusting NVIDIA's software to provide good feedback. I just took it to mean that once the atoms are loaded into the GPU's memory, there isn't a lot of traffic back and forth. I'm probably very, very wrong in that assumption!
I just got the GTX 1070 up and running so I'm going to let everything sit for now. I'm not sure if the power requirements for the EVGA GTX 1070 SC can be satisfied with the stock P/S in the Mac Pro 1,1.
I just got the GTX 1070 up and running so I'm going to let everything sit for now. I'm not sure if the power requirements for the EVGA GTX 1070 SC can be satisfied with the stock P/S in the Mac Pro 1,1.
-
- Posts: 410
- Joined: Mon Nov 15, 2010 8:51 pm
- Hardware configuration: 8x GTX 1080
3x GTX 1080 Ti
3x GTX 1060
Various other bits and pieces - Location: South Coast, UK
Re: geforce 1080 vs 1070
Yeah, this makes more sense than the huge bandwidth usage often quoted on windows - I can't believe that it it's really using 2 GB/s continuously (50% of 8x gen2). I'm seeing 1-2 % of gen2 4x on linux for a 980. I suspect that the 'usage' shown in windows might be similar to the cpu usage used by the drivers - it's just polling, not actually doing anything useful most of the time. I'm going to try a 1080 on a gen1 1x riser, and I'm not expecting to see much of a slowdown, but will report back after experimenting.Foxbat wrote:Yeah, good point. I guess I'm trusting NVIDIA's software to provide good feedback. I just took it to mean that once the atoms are loaded into the GPU's memory, there isn't a lot of traffic back and forth. I'm probably very, very wrong in that assumption!
Re: geforce 1080 vs 1070
That's going to be an interesting number.rwh202 wrote:I'm going to try a 1080 on a gen1 1x riser, and I'm not expecting to see much of a slowdown, but will report back after experimenting.
-
- Posts: 410
- Joined: Mon Nov 15, 2010 8:51 pm
- Hardware configuration: 8x GTX 1080
3x GTX 1080 Ti
3x GTX 1060
Various other bits and pieces - Location: South Coast, UK
Re: geforce 1080 vs 1070
I've had a quick play and gathered one datapoint. I wasn't too keen on leaving a 1080 jerry rigged all over the lounge floor, so will try and put something together in a spare system later.Sven wrote:That's going to be an interesting number.rwh202 wrote:I'm going to try a 1080 on a gen1 1x riser, and I'm not expecting to see much of a slowdown, but will report back after experimenting.
GTX 1080 FE (stock), linux mint 17.1, driver 367.27, core 21 v0.0.17, p9211 (r59)
PCIe 2 16x tpf: 4:46 = 500 kPPD (1% bus utilisation, 98% GPU utilisation)
PCIe 2 1x tpf: 5:00 = 466 kPPD (13% bus utilisation, 93% GPU utilisation)
So in this instance, there is a 5% difference in raw performance when bandwidth is reduced by 93%. Different projects/cores/drivers might be affected to a different extent, but I certainly wouldn't lose any sleep over using a 4x slot for even today's high end GPUs. However, what may still be a factor is how those PCIe lanes are connected to the processor - in my tests, both examples were using the CPU's dedicated graphics lanes. Going via the PCH and any other switches etc. may introduce more latency to main memory or whatever resources the cores are communicating with. Again, hoping to dig out an old system with a variety of slots and experiment a bit more.
-
- Posts: 1164
- Joined: Wed Apr 01, 2009 9:22 pm
- Hardware configuration: Asus Z8NA D6C, 2 x5670@3.2 Ghz, , 12gb Ram, GTX 980ti, AX650 PSU, win 10 (daily use)
Asus Z87 WS, Xeon E3-1230L v3, 8gb ram, KFA GTX 1080, EVGA 750ti , AX760 PSU, Mint 18.2 OS
Not currently folding
Asus Z9PE- D8 WS, 2 E5-2665@2.3 Ghz, 16Gb 1.35v Ram, Ubuntu (Fold only)
Asus Z9PA, 2 Ivy 12 core, 16gb Ram, H folding appliance (fold only) - Location: Jersey, Channel islands
Re: geforce 1080 vs 1070
When I tested a couple of months ago on PCIe 3 x16, PCIe 1 x16 and a couple of combinations in between I saw a 2-6% PPD drop on a 970 and a 980ti