Message boards : Graphics cards (GPUs) : 9500 GT -vs- 9600 GSO -vs- 9600 GT
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Hi everyone, | |
ID: 7004 | Rating: 0 | rate: / Reply Quote | |
So I want you to ask how much more performance I would get if I buy a 9600gso instead of a 9500gt or a 9600gt instead of a 9600gso. I can speak for a 9600GT (64 shaders), because I have one. :-) It was factory overclocked with 1800 MHz and I could crunch a big WU within a day some time earlier. Due to a regular WU failure I had to reduce the core clock to 1600 MHz and it runs stable now, making one WU mostly in under 30 hours. A 9500 GT has 32 shaders. So it should normally crunch a WU within two days, depending on the core clock also. Not sure what a 9600GSO makes, but afaik it's the lighter version of 9600GT, it should have a bit lower performance. Bear in mind that you normally can't crunch GPUGrid-WUs AND playing games at the same time with all the named cards. ____________ Member of BOINC@Heidelberg and ATA! | |
ID: 7005 | Rating: 0 | rate: / Reply Quote | |
If your PS is more than 300 watts, do not even consider the 9500GT. 32 shaders will work okay, but some longer work will require more than 2 days by a few hours meaning that some "babysitting" will be occasionally required. | |
ID: 7006 | Rating: 0 | rate: / Reply Quote | |
First of all thanks a lot for the detailed answers :-) | |
ID: 7009 | Rating: 0 | rate: / Reply Quote | |
By "babysitting" I mean you cannot simply install the card and let GPUGRID run. For example, let's assume you have a dual core PC. GPUGRID will download 2 workunits because allocation of work is by number of cores rather than number of GPU's (...this might change in the future given the new BOINC client changes in work-fetch policy). Thus, there will be times when you will download 2 of the longer workunits (or even worse, 3 or more in a row). Since these longer workunits will exceed two days each in runtime on a 32 shader card, you will exceed the 4-day completion deadline set by the project. If you are over by only a little (basically less than a few hours--the processing speed of the fastest NVIDIA card at that time) you will still get credit for the late work. However, if the workunit is reassigned and completed before you return it, then you get nothing. Thus, you will need to "babysit" (keep an eye on the card regularly) to make sure you are not stuck in a loop of always being behind and getting no credit (i.e. - you will occasionally need to abort a workunit or two). Cards with 50+ shaders or so do not run into this problem. | |
ID: 7010 | Rating: 0 | rate: / Reply Quote | |
ah ok - I see what you mean. | |
ID: 7011 | Rating: 0 | rate: / Reply Quote | |
Yes. You can certainly pause the WU's. The issue you encounter is having WU's pending / running that have no opportunity to finish on time. These will be resent out after the 4-day timeframe to another user, who will then work on it. The first person to respond gets the credit. The babysitting is that you might need to abort some WU's if they have no opportunity of finishing. | |
ID: 7012 | Rating: 0 | rate: / Reply Quote | |
I understand now the problem. | |
ID: 7013 | Rating: 0 | rate: / Reply Quote | |
But for now I think a 9500 is the better choise for me because of financial issues. And in a half year or so I will buy a completely new PC with a new better card... and so i wont waste money into hardware which will be replaced ... On the other hand, depending on where and how you buy your system, investing in a better card now, and not getting one later might be "better" as I understand your idea is to get a card now that you are going to discard in a few months ... Of course, if you get a new system with 2 or more PCI-e slots, you can always take this card along ... and have two cores running ... just a couple random thoughts. | |
ID: 7017 | Rating: 0 | rate: / Reply Quote | |
But for now I think a 9500 is the better choise for me because of financial issues. And in a half year or so I will buy a completely new PC with a new better card... and so i wont waste money into hardware which will be replaced ... I'm not the one to tell you what to do with your money.. but this doesn't add up. According to preistrend.de you can get the 9500GT for 50€ and the fast 9600GSO for 78€ (both plus shipping). If I couldn't spend 30€ more to get ~3 times the performance I certainly wouldn't buy a completely new PC in a couple of months. And, as Paul said, you could use both cards in your new PC (if it's got a board with 2 physical 16x PCIe slots). You could also get some good deals on used 8800GT-class cards on Ebay.. but that's somewhat risky, as (ab)used cards might produce too many calculation errors. MrS ____________ Scanning for our furry friends since Jan 2002 | |
ID: 7050 | Rating: 0 | rate: / Reply Quote | |
Message boards : Graphics cards (GPUs) : 9500 GT -vs- 9600 GSO -vs- 9600 GT