Three way graphical insanity
Subject: Graphics Cards | April 25, 2012 - 05:20 PM | Jeremy Hellstrom
Tagged: asus, P8P67 WS Revolution, sli, crossfilre, triple sli, tri-fire
[H]ard|OCP has assembled a review of the two best GPUs on the planet, in triplicate. It got off to a rough start as there is a serious issue with the last several Catalyst drivers, preventing you from using EyeFinity on Tri-Fire systems so they needed to revert to the release candidate that appeared back in January. The NVIDIA machine was easier to configure, once they realized that for triple surround they had to stay to one monitor per card. The PCIe lanes were provided by the ASUS P8P67 WS Revolution, which allowed these cards to really show off their stuff. Make sure you check out the power consumption page, you may be very surprised at how little power the GTX680s needed to run.
"What do you get when you install three GeForce GTX 680 cards for 3-Way SLI and then three Radeon HD 7970 cards for Tri-Fire? You get insanely fast gaming performance and a gameplay experience that begs to be compared delivered by both. We find out which multi-display configuration is better for gaming in Eyefinity and NV Surround."
Here are some more Graphics Card articles from around the web:
- ASUS GeForce GTX 680 Direct CU II 2 GB @ techPowerUp
- ASUS GeForce GTX 680 DirectCU II TOP @ Guru of 3D
- MSI GeForce GTX 680 TwinFrozr III OC @ Guru of 3D
- Palit JetStream GeForce GTX 680 4GB Video Cards in SLI @ Tweaktown
- Palit JetStream GeForce GTX 680 4GB @ Tweaktown
- NVIDIA GeForce GTX 680 "Kepler" On Linux @ Phoronix
- NVIDIA Adaptive VSync Technology @ [H]ard|OCP
- Workstation Graphics Card Comparison Guide @ TechARP
- AMD Versus Intel Integrated Graphics w/ Ivy Bridge @ Legit Reviews
- HIS HD7770 iCooler 1GB @ Overclockers Online
- AMD Fusion On Gallium3D Leaves A Lot To Be Desired @ Phoronix
- PowerColor Radeon HD 7850 2GB Review @ circuitREMIX
- HIS Radeon HD7870 IceQ @ XSReviews
- Gigabyte HD 7950 WindForce 3X & MSI HD 7950 Twin Frozr III Review @ Hardware Canucks
- MSI Radeon HD 7770 Power Edition 1GB @ Tweaktown
- MSI Radeon HD 7870 2GB TwinFrozr @ Tweaktown
- Sapphire Radeon HD 7870 2GB OC Edition @ Tweaktown
- AMD Radeon HD 7770 GHz Edition and Radeon HD 7750 @ X-bit Labs
- MSI Radeon HD 7970 Lightning 3 GB @ techPowerUp
- PowerColor PCS+ Radeon HD 7970 3GB VORTEX II @ Tweaktown
Tri-Fire/SLI redux, look at the difference SandyBridge makes!
Subject: Graphics Cards, Processors | May 6, 2011 - 01:09 PM | Jeremy Hellstrom
Tagged: tri-fire, crossfire, sli, triple, sandybridge
Not too long ago [H]ard|OCP examined the price to performance ratio between a triple SLI GTX580 system and a Tri-Fire HD6990 and HD6970 and discovered that as far as value goes, NVIDIA could not touch AMD. A reader of theirs inquired if it was the aging Core i7-920 that was holding the cards back even with the overclock of 3.6GHz. A SandyBridge system with a Core i7-2600K and an ASUS board with the NF200 bridge chip was used to revisit the performance of the two vendors GPUs. The result; we can hardly wait for the Z68 boards to come out!
"We have re-tested performance between GTX 580 3-Way SLI and Radeon HD 6990+6970 Tri-Fire with a brand new Sandy Bridge 4.8GHz system. Our readers wanted to know if the CPU speed would improve performance and open up the potential of this triple-GPU performance beasts. To put it succinctly, they were right. The results completely turn the tables upside down and then some."
Here are some more Graphics Card articles from around the web:
- Triple Monitor Gaming: GeForce GTX 590 vs. Radeon HD 6990 @ TechSpot
- Sapphire Radeon HD 5850 and HD 5830 1GB Xtreme @ Tweaktown
- XFX HD Radeon 6790 Review @ OCC
- PowerColor HD 6950 Vortex II 2 GB @ techPowerUp
- HIS Radeon 6870 IceQX @ XSReviews
- HIS Radeon HD 6790 1GB IceQ X Turbo @ Tweaktown
- AMD Radeon HD 6670 1GB and HD 6570 512MB GDDR5 @ Hi Tech Legion
- AMD Radeon 6990 4GB Graphics Card Review @ eTeknix
- MSI R6950 Twin Frozr II/OC, MSI R6870 Hawk, MSI N560GTX-Ti Twin Frozr II @ iXBT Labs
- May 2011: Gallium3D vs. Classic Mesa vs. Catalyst @ Phoronix
- How to overclock a graphics card @ eTeknix
- i3DSpeed, April 2011 @ iXBT Labs
- MSI GTX560-Ti OC SLI @ OC3D
- Zotac GeForce GTX 560 Ti AMP! Edition 1GB Video Card Review @ ThinkComputers
- GIGABYTE GTX 580 Super Overclock @ OCAU
Which is better, three heads from NVIDIA or three from AMD
Subject: Graphics Cards | May 2, 2011 - 03:46 PM | Jeremy Hellstrom
Tagged: tri-fire, triple, crossfilre, 3-way, sli, GTX580, HD6990, HD6970
[H]ard|OCP just finished a review that most enthusiasts would sell their souls ... or at least cash in their retirement savings ... to do themselves. They decided to find out which was better, a $1500 triple GTX 580 system or a $1100 HD 6990 + HD 6970 system. The findings are really quite clear, as is th efact that scaling has improved to the point where dropping that third GPU into your PC actually does make some sense to do.
"We've seen what a Radeon HD 6990 can do when paired with a Radeon HD 6970 for "Tri-Fire" performance. Now it is time to find out what three NVIDIA GeForce GTX 580 video cards in 3-Way SLI game like in comparison. We will look at A2A performance comparisons and discuss which setup offers the best gameplay experience."
Here are some more Graphics Card articles from around the web:
- AMD Radeon 6790 (Barts LE) @ Rbmods
- XFX Radeon HD 6950 XXX Edition Review @ Neoseeker
- XFX Radeon HD 6870 Black Edition Review @ OCC
- AMD Radeon HD 6670 Video Card Review @ Hardware Secrets
- Inno3D GTX 560 Ti iChiLL Edition vs PowerColor Radeon 6870 PCS++ Review @ HardwareHeaven
- AMD’s Radeon HD 6770 & Radeon HD 6750: The Retail Radeon 5700 Rebadge @ AnandTech
- HIS 6950/6970 Fan Turbo 2GB and HIS 6850 IceQ X Turbo 1GB @ iXBT Labs
- AMD Catalyst 11.4 Windows 7 Driver Analysis @ Tweaktown
- Desktop Graphics Card Comparison Guide @ TechARP
- Ars Reviews the Quadro 4000 Mac Edition: NVIDIA's sole Mac offering a promising start
- GELID Rev. 2 Icy Vision GPU Cooler Review @ Techgage
- MSI GeForce GTX 580 Lightning Review @ Hardware Canucks
- MSI GeForce GTX 560 Ti HAWK @ Tweaktown


