Message boards : Number crunching : Will an Athlon 64 X2, 3800+ 2000 MHz drive 2 x GTX 670's?
Author | Message |
---|---|
I have a an AMD Athlon 64 x2 3800+2 Manchester running Win7 x32. | |
ID: 25313 | Rating: 0 | rate: / Reply Quote | |
Need to know the motherboard to be specific. | |
ID: 25314 | Rating: 0 | rate: / Reply Quote | |
Hi 5pot, | |
ID: 25315 | Rating: 0 | rate: / Reply Quote | |
Both systems could support a GPU, but putting two GTX670's into a 2GHz Athlon dual core system would be very unbalanced. The cards performance would suffer from lack of PCIE bandwidth, CPU power and memory freq. I expect you would lose at least 20% performance per card, quite possibly twice that. | |
ID: 25316 | Rating: 0 | rate: / Reply Quote | |
How about 1 gpu per box...still not worth it because of the diminished performance? | |
ID: 25324 | Rating: 0 | rate: / Reply Quote | |
Maybe get one card, test it in both systems, and compare run times against other performances here. | |
ID: 25327 | Rating: 0 | rate: / Reply Quote | |
Overclock your CPUs. You should get 40% out of them without much effort. The increased performance will help to keep your GPUs busy. | |
ID: 25330 | Rating: 0 | rate: / Reply Quote | |
Hi Paul, | |
ID: 25335 | Rating: 0 | rate: / Reply Quote | |
Not a good board for running dual GFX cards..... but you could configure it to run one slot @ x16 Instead of 2 x 670, why not run 1 x 680? | |
ID: 25346 | Rating: 0 | rate: / Reply Quote | |
Ken: | |
ID: 25409 | Rating: 0 | rate: / Reply Quote | |
After several days of refreshing my memory on things like actual electricity costs and the cost of building a temporarily modern crunching machine, I am leaning toward saying thanks but no thanks to inheriting this set of 5 to 7 year old machines. The emerging plan is to build one machine each year for the next couple of years to dedicate to grid computing-based research. | |
ID: 25410 | Rating: 0 | rate: / Reply Quote | |
I continue to refine my thinking...hence the question: | |
ID: 25412 | Rating: 0 | rate: / Reply Quote | |
Assuming ram, psu, and mobo are up to the task...what is the fastest CPU required to optimize 2 GTX 670's or 680's in one physical machine? In terms of CPU performance (which supports the GPU), there is little out-and-out performance difference between any 32nm or 22nm CPU (clock for clock). So one isn't going to inherently outperform the other. Take the 3770K for example, it only outperforms an i7-2700K by on average 3.7%. The 3960K cant match an i7-990 for crunching most CPU projects. The more recent CPU's do offer some energy efficiency, but to some extent this is a gimic and obfuscates the reality. The IB CPU's are less dense core wise (4 cores compared to the 6 of an i7-980). Add the energy requirements of all the other system components and compare the work done per Watt and IB doesn't add up for a big crunching rig. While it does bring the PCIE bridge onto the CPU, which should improve performance for some GPU projects, it is really only suited to a 1 GPU rig. If you want to add a second GPU (and to answer your question) then you would be better off with a 2011board and a CPU such as a 3820 or 3930K (depending on your finances). That way you can increase GPU density, without the PCIE performance loss, which should prove to be more power efficient overall (performance per Watt). Fermi cards are PCIE2, so a CPU/board combo supporting PCIE 3 will offer no PCIE advantage over a PCIE2 system. Some CPU/motherboard systems are also very restrictive with PCIE lanes. This makes 1366 a better option for multi PCIE2 GPU setups. IB and SB don't have enough PCIE lanes, so the more cards you add the greater the loss per card. Anyway, this is uncharted territory; we don't know for sure if IB actually results in app/task improvement, we are not using a Kepler app yet, havn't compared a full task using PCIE3 vs PCIE2 for Kepler cards here... ____________ FAQ's HOW TO: - Opt out of Beta Tests - Ask for Help | |
ID: 25439 | Rating: 0 | rate: / Reply Quote | |
One of my systems is a Q6600 @ 3GHz that keeps a GTX 590 at 98% utilization on Windows XP. On a second system, the a Q6600 @ 3.2GHZ is feeding 2 GTX 570s and they stay busy. | |
ID: 25443 | Rating: 0 | rate: / Reply Quote | |
skgiven and Paul, | |
ID: 25460 | Rating: 0 | rate: / Reply Quote | |
My Windows XP system typically keeps the GPUs at 97% utilization. My Windows 7 systems are usually at 89%. This is with the same processor and same type of GPU. | |
ID: 25461 | Rating: 0 | rate: / Reply Quote | |
My Windows XP system typically keeps the GPUs at 97% utilization. My Windows 7 systems are usually at 89%. This is with the same processor and same type of GPU. Looks like you've got one Q6600 system running which is a much older CPU that handles much newer GPUs with little difficulty. My $0.02 follows: While I would think that perhaps gaming performance would be hurt by running the original poster's GPUs in the suggested machines, I wonder whether GPU performance for applications like GPUGrid would be bothered all that much if at all. The one question that I pose is exactly where do all the GPUGrid calculations and memory utilization take place? If those calculations and memory utilization take place on the GPU itself, then it seems that it is most likely that the proposed GPUs would run fine in the systems that the initial poster suggested especially since they would be dedicated to GPUGrid. However, if there is a significant amount of memory transfers between main system memory and the GPU card, then this, as I see it, would tend to hamper performance - even in an application like GPUGrid. Somehow, though, I don't see GPUGrid applications as reaching a level of main memory transfers that are anywhere near as intensive as modern games are, and since these systems would be dedicated entirely to GPUGrid, it seems like these systems, assuming the motherboards would actually run the GPUs, would work out just fine, and I think it is likely that the difference in performance would be minimal. Here is my first-hand experience in running a modern GPU in a much older system and a latest and greatest technology system: I have one system which runs an Opteron 1220 (which is the same generation as the Athlon 64 X2 from the original poser) on a Gigabyte GA-MA770-DS3 motherboard, and it was quite capable of running the GTX 580 I just bought. There seems to be little, if any, difference in performance of the 580 in that system for GPUGrid and the 580 in its new home - an i7-3820 on an ASRock X79Extreme6 motherboard. The difference in main memory bandwidth between these two motherboards is extreme, to say the least, and that seems to make no difference in performance for GPUGrid as WUs on the 3820 system finish in about the same time as they did when the 580 was running on the Opteron system. All the best! ____________ | |
ID: 25463 | Rating: 0 | rate: / Reply Quote | |
Ken, for an older technology, why not use older GPU's? | |
ID: 25528 | Rating: 0 | rate: / Reply Quote | |
Folks, | |
ID: 25540 | Rating: 0 | rate: / Reply Quote | |
You make some great points and the cost of electricity can be a factor in some parts of the world. In Tennessee, we pay about $0.08 per KWH. If the entire computers uses 1 KWH per hour, that is 168 KWHs a week or 732 KWH a month. That is about $58 per month per computer. It will take a while to save enough for a new rig. In addition, Intel and AMD will continue to innovate and find more efficient ways to complete more instructions per second so slap something together and get started. | |
ID: 25541 | Rating: 0 | rate: / Reply Quote | |
Thanks Paul! | |
ID: 25543 | Rating: 0 | rate: / Reply Quote | |
Could you provide some tips on your negotiation techniques? One of the issues I have is the fact that all "parts" purchases need to be approved. Something about how we spend too much money on my hobby, bla bla bla. | |
ID: 25552 | Rating: 0 | rate: / Reply Quote | |
Could you provide some tips on your negotiation techniques? Paul, I'd tell you but I'd have to kill myself...the intrigue…the temptation to fudge the numbers...the forlorn eyes...and 27 years of pitches that sound dreadfully similar...skills are developed after so many years. But seriously, as the Finance Minister quickly realized, gpugrid (and others), are a perfect intersection of my computer hobby and meaningful philanthropy. I'd been an early contributor to SETI but, somewhere in the midst of many dozen OS reinstalls, it got lost in the shuffle. When I "re"-discovered GPUGrid, I approached the, ahem, Minister of Finance with a proposal to re-examine the Commonwealth's charitable contributions. To fund gpugrid I proposed to shift a few coins from some institutions we'd long funded and increase our overall monthly contribution. The "pitch" was in the total monthly contribution to the arts, sciences, and humanitarian causes. I believe the key was in presenting this as amortized over the probable useable lifetime of the equipment. Much like a car salesperson (okay, exactly like a car salesperson), I prostrated myself on the "it's really the monthly payment you should care about. What if I could get your monthly payment down to $X? Would that make it affordable for you?" Very nearly shameless or shameful depending on one's point of view. If you'd like the fairly decent spreadsheet I built to make the case, PM me and I'll email it to you. Ken p.s. It probable wouldn't help to point out that the probable useful life of a GTX-690 is not 15 years...details...details. | |
ID: 25565 | Rating: 0 | rate: / Reply Quote | |
Ken: | |
ID: 25566 | Rating: 0 | rate: / Reply Quote | |
I use a sneaky approach to get round my other half. What see doesn't see she doesn't know about. I schedule parts deliveries to arrive whilst she is out at work - I work a rotating shift pattern so orders are placed timed to arrive when I'm off and she is at work. My cases stay the same, but it's whats inside changes. | |
ID: 25568 | Rating: 0 | rate: / Reply Quote | |
Thoroughly fiendish, | |
ID: 25569 | Rating: 0 | rate: / Reply Quote | |
Fiendish? Of course...... but then so is she..... her growing collection of shoes is testament to that..... she is a budding Imelda Marcos!!! | |
ID: 25570 | Rating: 0 | rate: / Reply Quote | |
Do you have a blog because I would love to follow it. You are a funny guy. Paul, Thanks for the kind words. I enjoy writing and occasionally the words come out just so. I've never earned a dime for writing. I had a blog for awhile but lost interest because of lack of interest. Maybe time to revive it. Let it be known that IF, the Minister of Finance read my post, a resigned "Why didn't you tell them about the water torture-like nature of your incessant 'pitches'?" would have been muttered. Bad news on the 590? Do you suspect malfeasance by the ebay seller or have you tried to push it too hard? Ken | |
ID: 25579 | Rating: 0 | rate: / Reply Quote | |
I schedule parts deliveries to arrive whilst she is out at work. Hi TheFiend, I'm glad you mentioned this method. I was too self-conscious to state it in my other post since I was trying to take the moral high road. However, if truth be told, my so-called moral high road may be more lamentable because the end is the same....more gear...while it hides behind altruistic language. In the pursuit of science, I remain, your co-conspirator. Ken | |
ID: 25580 | Rating: 0 | rate: / Reply Quote | |
Great posts everyone in regards to the Minister of Finance. Found them very funny and true....... | |
ID: 25583 | Rating: 0 | rate: / Reply Quote | |
5pot, | |
ID: 25586 | Rating: 0 | rate: / Reply Quote | |
Ken: | |
ID: 25589 | Rating: 0 | rate: / Reply Quote | |
@kflorian: | |
ID: 25613 | Rating: 0 | rate: / Reply Quote | |
Message boards : Number crunching : Will an Athlon 64 X2, 3800+ 2000 MHz drive 2 x GTX 670's?