Power, Temperatures, & Noise

Last, but not least of course, is our look at power, temperatures, and noise levels. While a high performing card is good in its own right, an excellent card can deliver great performance while also keeping power consumption and the resulting noise levels in check.

GeForce Video Card Voltages
RTX 2070S Boost RTX 2070 Boost RTX 2060S Boost RTX 2060 Boost
1.043v 1.05v 1.043v 1.043v

Looking quickly at boost voltages, there aren’t any big surprises. Like the non-Super cards they’re based on, both of the new Super cards will max out at either 1.043v or 1.05v at their highest boost bin. In reality, these cards are typically not boosting quite so high due to TDP limits, in which case power consumption is often under a volt(a).

GeForce Video Card Average Clockspeeds
Game RTX 2080 RTX 2070S RTX 2070 RTX 2060S
Max Boost Clock 1900MHz 1950MHz 1875MHz 1950MHz
Boost Clock 1710MHz 1770MHz 1620MHz 1650MHz
Tomb Raider 1785MHz 1875MHz 1725MHz 1800MHz
F1 2019 1785MHz 1875MHz 1770MHz 1815MHz
Assassin's Creed 1815MHz 1890MHz 1785MHz 1860MHz
Metro Exodus 1785MHz 1875MHz 1725MHz 1815MHz
Strange Brigade 1770MHz 1875MHz 1725MHz 1800MHz
Total War: TK 1785MHz 1875MHz 1725MHz 1815MHz
The Division 2 1740MHz 1845MHz 1680MHz 1755MHz
Grand Theft Auto V 1815MHz 1890MHz 1785MHz 1860MHz
Forza Horizon 4 1800MHz 1890MHz 1785MHz 1875MHz

Meanwhile the average in-game clockspeeds largely echo NVIDIA’s official claims. The new Super cards tend to have higher clockspeeds, owing to their higher starting points within NVIDIA’s specifications. These higher clockspeeds allow these cards to punch a bit harder than they otherwise would, narrowing the gap with their RTX 2080/2070 analogs. The trade-off for this is that TDP becomes a very careful balancing act, as these higher clockspeeds are farther up on the voltage/frequency curve where the underlying GPUs aren’t quite as efficient.

Idle Power Consumption

Load Power Consumption - Shadow of the Tomb Raider

Load Power Consumption - FurMark

Idle GPU Temperature

Load GPU Temperature - Shadow of the Tomb Raider

Load GPU Temperature - FurMark

Idle Noise Levels

Load Noise Levels - Shadow of the Tomb Raider

Load Noise Levels - FurMark

Synthetics Closing Thoughts
Comments Locked

281 Comments

View All Comments

  • coolkev99 - Tuesday, August 6, 2019 - link

    I'm STILL running my 2500k. :-o
  • Gastec - Wednesday, July 17, 2019 - link

    Because IT IS a high price for what it gives you.
  • Opencg - Wednesday, July 3, 2019 - link

    I just cannot back nvlink / sli. it is proven that developer and nvidia support fall short far too often. Sure you can run 4k 120fps most of the time but its not supported well enough across all titles. and issues like frame timing and imput lag are introduced. sli was good in older apis when it had the option for driver based sli aa. but newer apis require custom aa implementation and nobody has taken the time to make this tech work properly.
  • Qasar - Wednesday, July 3, 2019 - link

    Opencg you referring to SLI from 3dfx ?? i wonder how that version of SLI would work now a days.
  • Opencg - Thursday, July 4, 2019 - link

    Im mainly refering to how sli worked with older versions of direct x. In older versions the driver could force aa modes. With newer versions aa modes need to be programed in by the developer. For sli aa each card would render half of the samples for a given frame. The load on each card was almost the same. With alternating frame rendering each card renders every other frame and the load can vary from frame to frame. In the end it increases input lag or makes frame pacing less accurate or a little of both.
  • Qasar - Friday, July 5, 2019 - link

    ahh you're talking about nvidia's SLI.. not 3dfx's :-)
  • Opencg - Saturday, July 6, 2019 - link

    nvlink is sli. they changed the name and upgraded the bridge but the tech is functionally the same and has the same issues. (actually the issues are getting worse due to sli becoming less common and developers spending less time on it)
  • Qasar - Saturday, July 6, 2019 - link

    yep.. but 3dfx sli, and nvidia sli.. only share the abbreviation, nothing else... 3dfx SLI, Scan Line Interweave, nvidia sli Scalable link interface, 3dfx's version.. no need to create profiles or anything.. add the 2nd card.. see a performance boost right away... too bad that way of combining cards, doesnt work now a days...
  • nathanddrews - Wednesday, July 3, 2019 - link

    "NVLink"

    Good one! That had me laughing to myself for a good 20 seconds.
  • Gastec - Wednesday, July 17, 2019 - link

    SHILL ALERT!

Log in

Don't have an account? Sign up now