How much power does your video card use?
With everything going green, it was only a matter of time before we added more power consumption testing in the labs. With all the advancements in graphic cards--multiple GPUs, multiple power connections, Crossfire, and SLI--they're now one of the biggest energy hogs in your rig. Our goal is to look at GPU power consumption and measure power vs. performance vs.cost.
The test bed is Intel-based, with a Core i7 965 processor at 3.20GHz and 4GB of DDR3 SDRAM at 1066MHz. The meter used to measure the system's power is a Watts up? Pro ES. Watts up? is a "plug load" meter that measures the amount of electricity used by whatever is plugged into it.
Testing is done in two states, first the idle test; this is where we simulate an end-user environment, by opening Internet Explorer, iTunes, and Windows Mail. We then let the system idle for about 5 minutes, export the results from the Watts up?, and use the average of the total idle watts for our score.
The next phase is a 3D high-end test, where we have Crysis running multiple runs at 1,600x1,200 resolution and, like the idle test, we export and average the data.
For a detailed look at the actual testing process, check out the gallery below for photos of our GPU power testing setup. To see the actual results of our power consumption testing, check out these recent graphics card reviews.






Former radio DJ turned
journalist Dan Ackerman grew up in the Bronx and now lives in
Manhattan. He’s covered music, technology, and video games for
more than 10 years. His latest album, Tales Out of Night School
is available now.
Joseph Kaminski,
when not juggling the dual demands of parenthood and HD gaming, is a
life-long Manhattanite and can be found testing the latest tech in
CNET’s Lab.
Julie Rivera grew up
and currently resides in Brooklyn. When she's not deejaying,
bartending, or fixing gadgets for friends on the outside, you'll find
her testing, troubleshooting and developing benchmarks for laptops in
the "fish bowl" known as CNET Labs.
Scott Stein, CNET's
newest laptops editor, was born in Queens and grew up a Long Islander -
and is now raising a kid in NYC. In addition to covering games and
tech, writing screenplays, and performing improv in seedy downtown
establishments, he's also a die-hard, season-ticket-holding Jets fan.


I also want to know where is the results. I saw very little in the pictures???
-
by MongooseProXC
February 2, 2009 12:37 PM PST
- I have three 9800 GT2's in SLI drawing 500 watts of power each and I am rocking 24fps in Crysis! It's like doin 100 in a Hummer H2.
-
Like this
Reply to this comment
-
(10 Comments)