Origin’s Genesis: Titan on Water & More to Come

Wrapping up part 1 of our look at NVIDIA’s GeForce GTX Titan, we wanted to take a quick look at the tri-SLI system NVIDIA sampled to us for this article: Origin’s Genesis. Without the ability to publish performance data we can’t go into any detail and otherwise fully evaluate it, but what we can do is give you a sneak peek at what’s among the most unusual, and likely most powerful Titan systems on the market.

But first, as a bit of a preface, as we mentioned earlier in our article NVIDIA has been sampling reviewers with various SFF and tri-SLI systems to showcase their two boutique computer concepts. With the tri-SLI system it was not only intended to show off raw performance, but also to serve as a showcase of Titan’s build quality. You see, NVIDIA had told us that the acoustics on Titan were so good that a tri-SLI system could not only be a reasonable choice from a background noise perspective, but that it would be notably quieter than even a GTX 680 tri-SLI system, the latter being particularly hard to believe given GTX 680’s impressive acoustics and low power consumption.

Of course, things didn’t exactly go according to plan, and in a happy accident Origin went above and beyond NVIDIA’s original request. As the Genesis’ marquee feature is water-cooling, Origin went all-out in setting up our sample system for water-cooling, and not just on the CPU. Despite the fact that Titan was (and technically still is) an unreleased card, working alongside their waterblock supplier EKWaterBlocks they were able to get proper waterblocks for Titan in time to build our system. As a result our tri-SLI Genesis unexpectedly ended up being both completely water-cooled and factory overclocked.

The bad news of course is that because of the performance embargo we can’t tell you anything about the performance of the Genesis, other than to say that as fast as one Titan card is, three overclocked Titan cards running on water is even faster, sometimes by a massive margin. Furthermore, coupled with this is the fact that GPU Boost 2 was designed in part to better mesh with the superior cooling capabilities of water-cooling, taking advantage of the fact that water-cooled GPUs rarely hit their temperature limits. As a result what’s already a fast system can sustain performance that much higher thanks to the fact that we hit our top boost bins more often.

But we’re getting ahead of ourselves here…

Origin Genesis Specifications
Chassis Corsair 800D
Processor Intel Core i7-3970X Extreme Edition, Overclocked To 4.9GHz, ORIGIN CRYOGENIC Custom Liquid Cooling CPU
(6x4.9GHz, 32nm, 15MB L3, 150W)
Motherboard Intel DX79SR
Memory 16GB Corsair Vengeance DDR3 1866Mhz
Graphics 3-WAY SLI NVIDIA GeForce GTX TITAN, ORIGIN CRYOGENIC LIQUID Cooling Solution and Professional Overclocking
Hard Drive(s) 2x120 GB Corsair Neutron SSDs in RAID 0

1TB Western Digital Caviar Black SATA 6.0Gb/s, 7200RPM, 64MB Cache
Optical Drive(s) 12X Blu-ray (BD) Disc Combo
Power Supply 1.2 Kilowatt PSU Corsair
Networking On-Board Intel
Audio Realtek ALC892
Speaker, line-in, mic, and surround jacks
Front Side

Power button
4x Fan Controls
40-in-1 card reader
2x USB 3.0
2x USB 2.0
Mic and headphone jacks

Top Side -
Operating System Windows 7 Ultimate 64-bit
Dimensions 16.2" x 4.6" x 16"
(412mm x 117mm x 407mm)
Warranty

1 Year Part Replacement and 45 Day Free Shipping Warranty with Lifetime Labor/24-7 Support

Pricing MSRP of review system: ~$7000

We’ll have more on Thursday, including performance data for what so far is turning out to be a ridiculously fast tri-SLI system. So until then, stay tuned.

GPU Boost 2.0: Overclocking & Overclocking Your Monitor
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  • chizow - Friday, February 22, 2013 - link

    Um, GF100/110 are absolutely the same league as this card. In the semiconductor industry, size = classification. This is not the first 500+mm^2 ASIC Nvidia has produced, the lineage is long and distinguished:

    G80, GT200, GT200b, GF100, GF110.

    *NONE* of these GPUs cost $1K, only the 8800Ultra came anywhere close to it at $850. All of these GPUs offered similar features and performance relative to the competition and prevailing landscape. Hell, GT200 was even more impressive as it offered a 512-bit memory interface.

    Increase in number of transistors is just Moore's law, that's just expected progress. If you don't know the material you're discussing please refrain from commenting, thank you.
  • CeriseCogburn - Sunday, February 24, 2013 - link

    Wait a minute doofus, you said the memory cost the same, and it's cheap.
    You entirely disregarded the more than double the core transistor footprint, the R&D for it, the yield factor, the high build quality, and the new and extra top tier it resides in, not to mention it's awesome features the competition did not develop and does not have, AT ALL.
    4 monitors out of the box, Single card 3d and surround, extra monitor for surfing, target frame rate, TXAA, no tesselation lag, and on and on.

    Once a product breaks out far from the competitions underdeveloped and undeveloped failures, it EARNS a price tier.

    You're living in the past, you're living with the fantasy of zero worldwide inflation, you'r living the lies you've told yourself and all of us about the last 3 top tier releases, all your arguments exposed in prior threads for the exaggerated lies they were and are, and the Charlie D RUMORS all you of the this same ilk repeat, even as you ignore the absolute time years long DEV time and entire lack of production capability with your tinfoil hat whine.

    The market has changed you fool. There was a SEVERE SHORTAGE in the manufacturing space (negating your conspiracy theory entirely) and still there's pressure, and nVidia has developed a large range of added features the competition is entirely absent upon.

    You didn't get the 680 for $350 (even though you still 100% believe Charlie D's lie filled rumor) and you're not getting this for your fantasy lie price either.
  • CeriseCogburn - Sunday, February 24, 2013 - link

    NONE had the same or much bigger die sizes.
    NONE had 7.1 BILLION engineer traced research die points.
    NONE had the potential downside low yield.
    NONE had the twice plus expensive ram in multiples more attached.

    NONE is the amount of truth you told.
  • Stuka87 - Tuesday, February 19, 2013 - link

    Common sense would say nVidia is charging double what they should be.

    384bit memory is certainly not a reason for high cost as AMD uses it in the 79x0 series chips. A large die adds to cost, but the 580 had a big die as well (520mm2), so that cant be the whole reason for the high cost (the GK110 does have more transistors).

    So it comes down to nVidia wanted to scalp customers.

    As for your comments on AMD, what proof do you have that AMD has nothing else in the works? Not sure what crap you are referring too. I have had no issues with my AMD cards or their drivers (Or my nVidias for that matter). Just keep on hating for no reason.
  • AssBall - Tuesday, February 19, 2013 - link

    You speak of common sense, but miss the point. When have you ever bought a consumer card for the pre-listed MSRP? These cards will sell to OEM's for compute and to enthusiasts via Nvidia's partners for much less.

    So it comes down to "derp Nvidia is a company that wants to make money derp".

    Calling someone a hater for unrealistic reasons is much less of an offense than being generally an idiot.
  • TheJian - Wednesday, February 20, 2013 - link

    A chip with 7.1B transistors is tougher to make correctly than 3B. Which card has 6GB of 6ghz memory from AMD that's $500 with this performance? 7990 is $900-1000 with 6GB and is poorly engineered compared to this (nearly double the watts, two slots more heat etc etc).

    This is why K20 costs $2500. They get far few of these perfect than much simpler chips. Also as said before, engineering these are not free. AMD charges less you say? Their bottom line for last year shows it too...1.18B loss. That's why AMD will have no answer until the end of the year. They can't afford to engineer an answer now. They just laid of 30% of their workforce because they couldn't afford them. NV hired 800 people last year for new projects. You do that with profits, not losses. You quit giving away free games or go out of business.

    Let me know when AMD turns a profit for a year. I guess you won't be happy until AMD is out of business. I think you're hating on NV for no reason. If they were anywhere near scalping customers they should have record PROFITS but they don't. Without Intel's lawsuit money (300mil a year) they'd be making ~1/2 of what they did in 2007. You do understand a company has to make money to stay in business correct?

    If NV charged 1/2 the price for this they would be losing probably a few hundred on each one rather than probably a $200 profit or so.

    K20 is basically the same card for $2500. You're lucky their pricing it at $1000 for what you're getting. Amazon paid $2000ea for 10000 of these as K20's. You think they feel robbed? So by your logic, they got scalped 20,000 times since they paid double the asking here with 10000 of them?...ROFL. OK.

    What it comes down to is NV knows how to run a business, while AMD knows how to run one into the ground. AMD needs to stop listening to people like you and start acting like NV or they will die.

    AMD killed themselves the day they paid 3x the price they should have for ATI. Thank Hector Ruiz for that. He helped to ruin Motorola too if memory serves...LOL. I love AMD, love their stuff, but they run their business like idiots. Kind of like Obama runs the country. AMD is running a welfare business (should charge more, and overpays for stuff they shouldn't even buy), obama runs a welfare country, and pays for crap like solyndra etc he shouldn't (with our money!). Both lead to credit downgrades and bankruptcy. You can't spend your way out of a visa bill. But both AMD and Obama think you can. You have to PAY IT OFF. Like NV, no debt. Spend what you HAVE, not what you have to charge.

    Another example. IMG.L, just paid triple what they should have for the scrap of MIPS. I think this will be their downfall. They borrowed 22million to pay 100mil bid for mips. It was worth 30mil. This will prove to be Imaginations downfall. That along with having chip sales up 90% but not charging enough to apple for them. They only made 30mil for 6 MONTHS! Their chip powers all of apples phones and tablets graphics! They have a hector ruiz type running their company too I guess. Hope they fire him before he turns them into AMD. Until Tegra4 they have the best gpu on a soc in the market. But they make 1/10 of what NV does. Hmmm...Wrong pricing? Apple pockets 140Bil over the life of ipad/iphone...But IMG.L had to borrow 22mil just to buy a 100mil company? They need to pull a samsung and raise prices 20% on apple. NV bought icera with 325mil cash...Still has 3.74B in the bank (which btw is really only up from 2007 because of Intel's 300mil/yr, not overcharging you).
  • CeriseCogburn - Sunday, February 24, 2013 - link

    Appreciate it. Keep up the good work, as in telling the basic facts called the truth to the dysfunctional drones.

    no physx
    no cuda
    no frame rate target (this is freaking AWESOME, thanks nVidia)
    no "cool n quiet" on the fly GPU heat n power optimizing max fps
    no TXAA
    no same game day release drivers

    EPIC FAIL on dual cards, yes even today for amd

    " While it suffers from the requirement to have proper game-specific SLI profiles for optimum scaling, NVIDIA has done a very good job here in the past, and out of the 19 games in our test suite, SLI only fails in F1 2012. Compare that to 6 out of 19 failed titles with AMD CrossFire."

    http://www.techpowerup.com/reviews/NVIDIA/GeForce_...

    nVidia 18 of 19, 90%+ GRADE AAAAAAAAAA

    amd 13 of 19 < 70% grade DDDDDDDDDD
  • Iketh - Tuesday, February 19, 2013 - link

    please drag yourself into the street and stone yourself
  • CeriseCogburn - Sunday, February 24, 2013 - link

    LOL awww, now that wasn't very nice... May I assume you aren't in the USA and instead in some 3rd world hole with some 3rd world currency and economy where you can't pitch up a few bucks because there's no welfare available ? Thus your angry hate filled death wish ?
  • MrSpadge - Tuesday, February 19, 2013 - link

    Don't worry.. price will drop if they're actually in a hurry to sell them.

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