Ichbin3 wrote:MeeLee wrote:the 2080Ti, which needed at least 160W to work. Though 180W was a significant improvement over 160W.
Do you have any data regarding the proportion of input power and output PPD for this card?
I'm asking because I'm considering the 2080Ti.
I don't record data like you do.
I see PPD, I fold, I have enough work as is in normal life. My rigs are on the balcony and affected by ambient temperature changes (like day/night, sun/rain temperatures); which makes data logging more work that I needed to actually make the thing work well.
But what kind of data do you need?
The easiest way in Linux, is to look at the effect of controlling the power flow to a GPU, and looking at the GPU frequency.
While the GPU frequency is different for every WU, and slightly differs between WUs of the same kind, there's a general trend that emerges, that you learn over time.
I never owned a 2080 Super, so I don't know at what frequency it runs best. But my 2070 Super needs ~135-140W, and is slower than even the regular 2080.
On a 2080 Ti there's a sharp decline around 170W, where GPU frequency drops in the ~1500Mhz range.
Adding 10 Watts will increase speed by 100Mhz, adding another 10W will add 75Mhz, another 10W and about 50Mhz gets added.
It's a curve, that has a critical point around 1785-1875Mhz.
Anything beyond that point is adding too much power for the performance.
I prefer to look at performance figures, based on the GPU frequencies, rather than on PPD, as they're both connected, though GPU frequencies get updated a few times a second, while PPD numbers take a while to settle.
One piece of advise I can tell you,
I was instructed not to talk about overclocking here, since FAH doesn't support it, but the RTX series GPUs have RAM rated of up to 14Gbps by Nvidia, but use ram modules that come from Hynix or Samsung rated at 15Gbps.
The 2080 Super has one that is rated for 15,5Gbps, the fastest modules of all of them.
In all my tests, the 15Gbps (by hynix/Samsung)(14Gbps by Nvidia) ram modules ran fine up to just under 16Gbps, though anything from 15Gbps doesn't really improve performance by much at all.
So I would say running them at 15Gbps should technically not be seen as overclocking, as Hynix and Samsung rate them as such.
Been running mine for many months (some as long as 1,5 years) with this 15Gbps setting.
Some programs may show 15Gb as 7,5Gbps, as they're Double Data Rate.