nForce 780i Platform

NVIDIA targets their top chipset at the "hard-core overclocker", and each new generation adds more features that cater to the computer enthusiast. The nForce 780i tops the product line and defines state-of-the-art for NVIDIA chipsets.




The 780i is the 680i chipset with an added nForce 200 chip to support 32 lanes of PCIe 2.0 capabilities. This allows the addition of 3-way PCIe with three x16 PCIe slots. It is important to point out that while there are three x16 slots for 3-way SLI, only two of the x16 slots are PCIe 2.0 compliant. The third x16 slot is derived from the nForce 570 MCP (identified in the block diagram as the 780i SLI MCP), which is an older chip that is not PCIe 2.0 compliant.



The nForce 200 is a PCI Express switch chip with one upstream port and up to four downstream ports. The 780i provides two x16 PCIe 2.0 downstream ports, which can also be configured as four x8 PCI Express 2.0 ports. The interface between the 200 chip and the 780i SLI SPP provides a maximum bandwidth of 4.5 GT/s per link, which is enough bandwidth to provide full performance of PCI Express 2.0 Graphics cards like the 8800GT.

In the launch review for the 680i chipset we saw the 680i with a total of 46 PCIe lanes, distributed as 18 with the SPP and 28 with the MCP. As you can see in the above diagram 780i has 62 PCIe lanes, distributed as the same 28 lanes on the MCP, just two lanes on the SPP, and 32 PCIe 2.0 lanes on the nForce 200 chip. The extra 16 PCIe lanes on the 680i SPP provide communication with the nForce 200 chip. The bottom line is the 780i picks up an extra "full" x16 PCIe slot. The PCIe lane count, ports, and device support are otherwise the same as the 680i chipset.



With the addition of 3-way SLI as a new 780i chipset feature, NVIDIA believes hard-core gamers and performance enthusiasts will migrate to the 780i motherboards. We will examine Triple SLI performance in a separate review that you will definitely want to read, particularly if you are a hard-core gamer.

Index nForce 750i Platform
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  • Wesley Fink - Tuesday, December 18, 2007 - link

    As mentioned in the article we also have a 780i overclocking review coming to answer your questions in more detail. This was a chipset launch, and there was little point of doing game tests when performance is the same as the well-tested 680i. The benchmarks we did run were just a sanity test to determine if 680i/780i really did perform the same, and they did.

    Anand is delving into Triple SLI performance and Gary Key will be doing an article on overclocking the 780i with Penryn. I will be following up later with an ESA system review, although the ESA test platform is actually is powered by a 680i.

    All of these reviews were planned to work together, but got sidetracked in our server crisis and image meltdown. You should see Anand's Gaming/Triple SLI review tomorrow.
  • Frumious1 - Tuesday, December 18, 2007 - link

    Since I don't have behind the scenes info, I'm left to conjecture. Maybe nVidia sent the hardware on Friday and you didn't have time, or maybe there were a bunch of testing issues. HardOCP seemed to be pretty unimpressed, but then what's new? Since this is a chipset launch article, with a few new features, I just felt we should see testing to check out how those features impact performance.

    SLI support, you've got SLI/Tri-SLI testing from Anand but that's with 8800 Ultra cards. It was a nice article, covering that area, but what about PCIe 2.0? Seems to be a part of the chipset, and some sanity checks with 8800GT SLI on both 680i and 780i would have been able to say if there was any actual difference. That wasn't done anywhere yet. That is not a motherboard review, or a Penryn overclocking article - that is a part of the chipset.

    ESA is a system thing as I understand it, so it makes sense to wait for a complete system review. Overclocking is also somewhat part of a chipset review, but as demonstrated in teh past it's also very motherboard specific. Otherwise why is it that Asus, DFI, etc. do better than some others?

    What it comes down to is that there appears to be one truly new and unique feature for 780i: PCIe 2.0 support. Well, and Penryn support, but that seems to be something that can be addressed on new 680i boards since 680i ~= 780i - nF200. You totally missed that in this "chipset launch review" by not even touching that with any form of benchmark. Show us some games, with PCIe 2.0 graphics cards, and show us whether there's any difference or not. That's what I want from an article looking at a new chipset - a focus on what's actually new.
  • Wesley Fink - Tuesday, December 18, 2007 - link

    We said in the review that the current top PCIe 2.0 cards like the 8800 GT do not even come close to saturating the past PCIe 1.1 bus. Since PCIe 2.0 is just a bandwidth increase, and nothing else, why would you expect it to make any difference at all in the performance of the 8800 GT? That was alreay a known before the chipset review.

    Anand tested with the 8800 Ultra because the 8800 GT will NOT work in triple SLI. You must have a dual SLI connector for triple SLI, and the 8800GT doesn't have a dual connector. That is very well-explained in Anand's 3-way SLI article, and only the near obsolete 8800GTX and 8800Ultra have the dual connector.

    Frankly we're always ready to test new technology, but the best I can figure the 780i SPP is a 680i SPP with the 16 lane PCIe connect overclocked to 4.5 GT/s. nVidia couldn't even quite reach the 5.0 GT/s level that is the PCIe 2.0 spec, but it really doesn't matter since PCIe 2.0 makes no difference today - it might in the future. The MCP is a 2-generations ago 570 MCP.

    Changing an ID string and stamping a chip with a new name does not make it new technology. The chipset works well and will fill in for a short period until nVidia introduces their new chipset that will support 1600 FSB and DDR3.

  • Wesley Fink - Tuesday, December 18, 2007 - link

    We said in the review that the current top PCIe 2.0 cards like the 8800 GT do not even come close to saturating the past PCIe 1.1 bus. Since PCIe 2.0 is just a bandwidth increase, and nothing else, why would you expect it to make any difference at all in the performance of the 8800 GT? That was alreay a known before the chipset review.

    Anand tested with the 8800 Ultra because the 8800 GT will NOT work in triple SLI. You must have a dual SLI connector for triple SLI, and the 8800GT doesn't have a dual connector. That is very well-explained in Anand's 3-way SLI article, and only the near obsolete 8800GTX and 8800Ultra have the dual connector.

    Frankly we're always ready to test new technology, but the best I can figure the 780i SPP is a 680i SPP with the 16 lane PCIe connect overclocked to 4.5 GT/s. nVidia couldn't even quite reach the 5.0 GT/s level that is the PCIe 2.0 spec, but it really doesn't matter since PCIe 2.0 makes no differenc today - it might in the future. The MCP is a 2-generations agao 570 MCP.

    Changing an ID string and stamping a chip with a new name does not make it new technology. The chipset works well and will fill in for a short period until nVidia introduces their new chipset that will support 1600 FSB and DDR3.

  • Frumious1 - Wednesday, December 19, 2007 - link

    I understand why Anand used 8800 Ultra cards. That was the point of his article: Tri-SLI. Not chipset or anything else. And I'm guessing you're right that PCIe 2.0 is nothing and won't impact performance for probably years - in fact, I bet PCIe x8 is sufficient for everything we currently do, since ATI and nVidia use bridge connections for most card-to-card communications in SLI/CF. I'd still love to see an actual test that proves this is the case.

    You and I and everyone else can assume all we want, but without a test we don't actually KNOW. Since the only PCIe 2.0 cards are 8800GT (and the new GTS) and 3850/3870, and since this is an nVidia chipset, I just thought it would be good to prove and not guess at what impact PCIe 2.0 has. Maybe nVidia does benefit in some situations on SLI setups. Not likely, but maybe.
  • Frumious1 - Tuesday, December 18, 2007 - link

    PS - if you don't have two 8800 GT cards floating around for PCIe 2.0 tests, you need to slap nVidia! Besides Penryn, that's the only feature worth testing on the new chipset.
  • masteryoda34 - Monday, December 17, 2007 - link

    This is probably the most disappointing recent motherboard launch from Nvidia. The only reason I could see buying this over an Intel P35 or X38 is for the SLI support. It's unfortunate they didn't use a new chipset. Basically the same as when they did NF4 to NF5, no new features just processor support.
  • anandtech02148 - Monday, December 17, 2007 - link

    with all these bulky graphic card pile up.. why dont' they just make a dongle connector for all the Sata ports.
    that or i need someone with sausage fingers that can reach all the sata ports.
    and i guess the graphic guys realy want to rub out the audio cards.

  • Wesley Fink - Monday, December 17, 2007 - link

    Actually the SATA ports are still accessible even with 3 double width graphics cards in Triple SLI. If you click to blow up the motherboard images on p.6 you will see the SATA ports are located so they fall just to the right of the first PCIe slot.

    You're right about audio though. Fortunately the on board is hi-def Azalia, but many will want a better audio card for 3-way SLI gaming.
  • customcoms - Monday, December 17, 2007 - link

    Should be 650i, not 750i. Page 3.

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