Blog
NVIDIA GT300 targets 225W TDP
Published
17 years agoon
By
ArchivebotUnlike AMD/ATI, nVidia spent Computex Taipei 2009 in silence, not mentioning anything about the future of their hardware. That was to be expected, given the fact that nVidia was also silent during Computex Taipei 2008, and then briefing select journalists about Tesla D1060 and S1070 week after the show in Santa Clara, CA. Of course, this was followed by launching GeForce GTX280 and GTX260 the week after.
Thus, nVidia is keeping silent about their DirectX 11 plans, but don’t think that the timing of their “nVision Lite” [End of September 2009] is timed just because they want to talk about 15 month GT200 architecture. Our sources are confident that the part is on track, and that it will launch during Q3 2009. Again, according to the same sources, one of primary concerns was how to avoid all the thermal spots that plagued the GT200 architecture.
The GT300 part targets a thermal range of 225W and should feature two 6-pin PEG [PCI Express Graphics] power connectors, same as on the current GTX285 graphics card. The target was not previously rumored 300W, e.g. one 8-pin and one 6-pin PCIe. Then again, nVidia should hold off from opening the champagne, since ATI’s Evergreen uses just one 6-pin PEG. Dual Evergreen will probably use the conventional high-end arrangement off one 8-pin and one 6-pin PEG connector.
There you go. You have a 40nm chip targeting clocks of 700 MHz for the core, 1600 MHz for those 512 MIMD shader cores and nice 1.1 GHz QDR, e.g. 4.4 GT/s for the GDDR5 memory… sucking same amount of power as the actual GTX285. Expect Jen-Hsun and Ujesh to be all over the power features inside the chip, since the chip architects sweated blood over this one.
Original Author: Theo Valich
Webmaster’s note: You have stumbled on one of the old articles from our archive, for the latest articles we would recommend a click to our tech news category. There you can find the latest technology news and much more. Additionally, we take great pride in our Home Office section, as well as the best VPN one, so be sure to check them out as well.
You may like
Malaysia’s 2026 Anti-Online Gambling Reform: Betting Act Amendments, MCMC Blocks & Influencer Enforcement
Understanding PAGCOR License: Meaning, Risks & Checks
Common Esports Bet Types: Markets Used in Major Games
Sports Betting Types Explained: How Markets, Odds & Bets Work
Sports Betting Odds Explained: How to Read & Compare Formats
2026 Gambling Law Guide: Malaysia, Thailand & Singapore Updates
CS2 vs Dota 2 vs LoL: Key Differences in Esports Betting
GameZone Philippines Mobile Game Expands Structured Card Tables
How Esports Betting Works: Odds, Markets, Rules and Risks
