Power, Temperature, & Noise

As always, we wrap up our look at a new video card with a look at the physical performance attributes: power consumption, temperatures, and noise. With new process nodes being the lifeblood of the GPU industry, each new process gives GPU manufacturers a chance to move their product along a continuum; do they take advantage of a power consumption reduction for the same performance level, a performance increase for the same power consumption, or something in between? In AMD’s case they’ve chosen to try to maximize performance within Cayman’s power budget, which means power, temperature, and noise should be similar to what we’ve seen with 6970, cooler improvements not withstanding.

Before we get into the charts, it’s worth noting right now that we don’t have a good idea of what 7970’s operational voltage is, as we don’t have any tools that can read 7970’s VRMs. We believe it’s close to Cayman’s, but this is something that will require confirmation in the future.

Idle Power Consumption

Starting as always with idle power, we can immediately see the benefits of the work AMD has put into idle power usage with Southern Islands. AMD has been working hard to reduce idle power consumption since the 4870 and at this point they’ve finally beaten even the 3870, which was a relatively small GPU using GDDR3 RAM. AMD’s official typical idle TDP here is 15W, and we have little doubt they’re going to continue to whittle that number down on future generations.

Long Idle Power Consumption

While we’re looking at idle power, we also wanted to take a look at AMD’s “long idle” scenario, where a blanked display or being slave GPU in a multi-GPU setup gives a GPU the opportunity to go into a deeper sleep state as it’s not needed for any work. Through ZeroCore Power AMD is able to shut off virtually every aspect of Tahiti when in a long idle state, allowing AMD to reduce the power consumption of 7970 to under 3W. Meanwhile for every other card there’s a very slight gain to be had in long idle because the GPU can power down all of its display transmitters, but it’s not nearly as effective as shutting down the entire GPU, which is why 7970 has a 10W advantage at the wall versus the next closest GPU.

As we said earlier in our look at ZeroCore Power technology, while the numbers are impressive enough, for the desktop the real use will be in multi-GPU systems as slave GPUs can be put in a ZCP state even while the master GPU is awake and working, significantly reducing idle power and noise in multi-GPU systems.

Load Power Consumption - Metro 2033

Moving on to our load power tests, based on our testing we have swapped out Crysis for Metro 2033 in this iteration of our benchmark suite as Metro 2033 was proving to be a bit more strenuous on our GPUs and is the only game to ever trigger PowerTune on the 6970.

Looking at Metro it’s clear that the smaller fabrication process for 6970 has allowed AMD to achieve a lower power consumption level relative to their gaming performance – the 7970 leads the GTX 580 by 20-30% in performance while consuming 34W less at the wall. At the same time this test calls into question AMD’s power targets. We’re clearly drawing more power than the 6970 – 21W more to be precise – and while this could be explained by CPU power consumption I’m not convinced that’s the case.

Load Power Consumption - OCCT

As for our pathological power consumption test we’ve moved on to OCCT, which at this point in time escapes NVIDIA’s throttling mechanism and in spite of the presence of PowerTune still manages to be a hardware workload on AMD’s GPUs than FurMark. OCCT backs up our earlier data from Metro that 7970 draws more power than 6970 even with the similar power targets. We’re drawing 50W more at the wall, which on paper at least would put 7970’s power consumption closer to 280W if AMD’s original 250W target for 6970 is still correct. If all of this is correct, then it calls into doubt AMD’s published power targets, as it looks like AMD has made a power/performance tradeoff with 7970 by trading slightly higher power consumption for what would be higher performance.

Idle GPU Temperature

Up next is our look at idle temperatures. All of the last generation GPUs were highly competitive here and as a result it’s a tough crowd as there’s relatively little room to further reduce a GPU’s temperature. Nevertheless the 7970 manages to squeak by the competition, with a recorded idle temperature of 34C, 1C lower than the GTX 580 and 2C lower than the 6970.

Load GPU Temperature - Metro 2033

Moving on to temperatures under Metro, the results are quite surprising: the 7970 does really, really good here given its power consumption. At 74C the only cooler video cards are the 6850 and 5850, both of which are lower tier, lower power versions of higher end parts. Part of this can be traced back to AMD’s cooling optimizations such as moving back to a full slot exhaust vent, but I don’t believe that’s a full explanation. We’ll get back to this when we’re looking at noise.

Load GPU Temperature - OCCT

While the overall numbers are higher in OCCT, the relative rankings are unchanged from Metro. The only cooler cards in this lineup are the 6950 and 5850. Here the 7970 hits 79C, while the 6970 is slightly behind at 80C, and the GTX 500 series is in the upper 80s.

Idle Noise Levels

Last we have our look at noise, starting with idle noise. Much like our idle temperatures most single-GPU video cards tend to cluster together within 1dB, but the 7970 has managed to silence most of the rest of the pack, with a recorded noise level of 40.2dB. More impressive perhaps is the 7970 when in its Zero Core Power state. Because the fan turns off, the card is silent; 37.9dB(A) is the noise floor of our testbed.

Load Noise Levels - Metro 2033

Moving on to our load noise measurements the full picture of the 7970’s cooling performance finally starts coming together. We’ve seen that the 7970 is a cool card, but is it a quiet card? The numbers say no. The 7970 is 3dB louder than the GTX 580 and 2dB louder than the 6970 even with its physical cooling improvements. Based on this combined with our temperature data it’s clear that AMD has targeted aggressive cooling over silence, whereas NVIDIA traditionally targets silence over aggressive cooling. When it comes to our testbed AMD has probably overdone it – we could easily exchange 10C for less noise – but with a wide range of computers in the world it’s hard to tell from a single testbed whether the cooling here is genuinely too aggressive for everyone, or if it’s the opposite. What isn’t in question is that the 7970 is going to be moderately loud, which coming from AMD is a surprising development.

Load Noise Levels - OCCT

Once again with OCCT the numbers are higher, but the facts are largely the same. The 7970 is now quieter than the GTX 580 due to PowerTune, but it’s now 4dB louder than the 6970. Unlike Metro 57.3dB of noise is in the middle of the pack, but it stands to reason that AMD could have been a bit less aggressive on their fan speeds and made a quieter card as a result.

Theoreticals & Tessellation Final Words
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  • CeriseCogburn - Sunday, March 11, 2012 - link

    We'll have to see if amd "magically changes that number and informs Anand it was wrong like they did concerning their failed recent cpu.... LOL
    That's a whole YEAR of lying to everyone trying to make their cpu look better than it's actual fail, and Anand shamefully chose to announce the number change "with no explanation given by amd"... -
    That's why you should be cautious - we might find out the transistor count is really 33% different a year from now.
  • piroroadkill - Thursday, December 22, 2011 - link

    Only disappointing if you:

    a) ignored the entire review
    b) looked at only the chart for noise
    c) have brain damage
  • Finally - Thursday, December 22, 2011 - link

    In Eyefinity setups the new generation shines: http://tinyurl.com/bu3wb5c
  • wicko - Thursday, December 22, 2011 - link

    I think the price is disappointing. Everything else is nice though.
  • CeriseCogburn - Sunday, March 11, 2012 - link

    The drivers suck
  • RussianSensation - Thursday, December 22, 2011 - link

    Not necessarily. The other possibility is that being 37% better on average at 1080P (from this Review) over HD6970 for $320 more than an HD6950 2GB that can unlock into a 6970 just isn't impressive enough. That should be d).
  • piroroadkill - Friday, December 23, 2011 - link

    Well, I of course have a 6950 2GB that unlocked, so as far as I'm concerned, that has been THE choice since the launch of the 6950, and still is today.

    But you have to ignore cost at launch, it's always high.
  • CeriseCogburn - Thursday, March 8, 2012 - link

    I agree RS, as these amd people are constantly screaming price percentage increase vs performance increase... yet suddenly applying the exact combo they use as a weapon against Nvidia to themselves is forbidden, frowned upon, discounted, and called unfair....
    Worse yet, according to the same its' all Nvidia's fault now - that amd is overpriced through the roof...LOL - I have to laugh.
    Also, the image quality page in the review was so biased toward amd that I thought I was going to puke.
    Amd is geven credit for a "perfect algorythm" that this very website has often and for quite some time declared makes absolutely no real world difference in games - and in fact, this very reviewer admitted the 1+ year long amd failure in this area as soon as they released "the fix" - yet argued everyone else was wrong for the prior year.
    The same thing appears here.
    Today we find out the GTX580 nvidia card has much superior anti-shimmering than all prior amd cards, and that finally, the 7000 high end driver has addressed the terrible amd shimmering....
    Worse yet, the decrepit amd low quality impaired screens are allowed in every bench, with the 10% amd performance cheat this very site outlined them merely stated we hope Nvidia doesn't so this too - then allowed it, since that year plus ago...
    In the case of all the above, I certainly hope the high end 797x cards aren't CHEATING LIKE HECK still.
    For cripe sakes, get the AA stuff going, stop the 10% IQ cheating, and get our bullet physics or pay for PhysX, and stabilize the drivers .... I am sick of seeing praise for cheating and failures - if they are (amd) so great let's GET IT UP TO EQUIVALENCY !
    Wow I'm so mad I don't have a 7970 as supply is short and I want to believe in amd for once... FOR THE LOVE OF GOD DID THEY GET IT RIGHT THIS TIME ?!!?
  • slayernine - Thursday, December 22, 2011 - link

    Holy fan boys batman!

    This comment thread reeks of nvidia fans green with jealousy
  • Hauk - Thursday, December 22, 2011 - link

    LOL, Wreckage first!

    Love him or hate him, he's got style..

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