Nvidia gets a big advantage in 3DMark Vantage because of PhysX on GPU tech |
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| Hardware | ||||
| By Theo Valich | ||||
| Friday, June 20, 2008 15:20 | ||||
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Mountain House (CA) – Nvidia’s released two powerful weapons with its GeForce 9800 GTX+ graphics card: The company can now compete against AMD’s brilliant Radeon 4850 graphics card on price and the company finally has an answer to ATI's dominance in 3DMark benchmarks. You can bet the farm on Nvidia claiming the highest scores in the physics discipline.
Our Intel Core 2 Extreme QX9650 clocked at 3802 MHz delivered a CPU score of 15,005, which jumped to 42,436 using a single GTX 280 card. With two GTX 280 boards, we got 42,374 CPU marks, and three GTX 280 boards resulted in a CPU score of 41,387.
The decreasing score of the 2-way and 3-way SLI configurations are not surprising, as PhysX uses only one GPU and currently isn't multi-GPU scalable. So, the lower score should be expected, especially since the SLI bridge is taking its toll: CPU cycles are consumed because of the synchronization between two or three cards. Additionally, there is an additional saturation of PCI Express bus.
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Shop Keywords: Nvidia, PhysX, physics, GTX2800