Magic Carpet
Diamond Member
- Oct 2, 2011
- 3,477
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Congrats. What about the coil whine, does it have any?I just bought a R9 Fury Nano today for a new SFF/Mini-ITX build..
Congrats. What about the coil whine, does it have any?I just bought a R9 Fury Nano today for a new SFF/Mini-ITX build..
Wow nano is a great deal at those prices....The Nano is cheaper than the 980 now in the UK. Prices correct at time of posting.
360 - £239
970 - £244
390X - £300
Nano - £350
980 - £374
Fury - £410
Fury X - £470
980 Ti - £500
Nano is now the best value card of the lot probably.
Wow nano is a great deal at those prices....
My question is isn't fury even cheaper than nano to produce? Why not cut the price there too? It doesn't make sense with it being more expensive than nano unless I'm mixing up their performance.
Looks more and more like fiji prices will drop to a point where maybe I'll get it. But still gotta see Polaris....
Supply and demand. I would imagine if they had a lot of harvested chips laying around they'd cut prices. Keep in mind that they've cut the price, pretty dramatically, of the top binned chip.
I mentioned it in another thread but I'll mention it here since it's even more relevant here.
The current price structure of chips leaves NOTHING for Nvidia. You'd be throwing money down the drain buying any chip but the 980Ti right now.
Otherwise, the R9 390 is almost as fast as a GTX 980, for far less. The R9 390x is around $350 right now. It's FASTER than GTX 980.
The R9 Nano is $450, and is significantly faster than a GTX 980.
ALL ARE CHEAPER THAN THE GTX 980.
Too bad it's so late in this GPU cycle, but AMD has the best deals now for anyone who needs a GPU now.
Supply and demand. I would imagine if they had a lot of harvested chips laying around they'd cut prices. Keep in mind that they've cut the price, pretty dramatically, of the top binned chip.
Or yields are getting better and it will be cheaper to sell the nano without that water cooling stuff. Less physical hardware.
I really like the R9 nano, so small and power efficient. fits nicely in small cases.
A 390x is faster than a stock 980 at 1440p and 4k, but stock 980's are uncommon and even then 980's overclock and easily to surpass the 390x at 1440p and at 4k. It's still not worth the $120 price difference though.
Proof? The VAST majority of computer owners never overclock anything. They never over clock the CPU or GPU. Enthusiast OC sure, but we are a minority.
Some anecdotal evidence, or all the PC gamers I work with, I am the only one that has ever over clocked anything.
Does discussing what the "VAST majority" does matter on the AT message board? His point stands - the 390X is generally a better value than the 980, even if you overclock them both.
Do you guys have links showing the 980 actually performing better OC vs OC, when the 980 lost at stock vs stock? I know people kept claiming this over and over for 970 vs 390 only to find that the 390 maintained the exact same difference from the 970 when both were OC'd.
. A good OC on a 980 usually results in more victories for the 980.
Yes people keep saying this, but does anyone actually have proof, like a graph showing stock vs stock and OC vs OC (preferably using average OC's from HWBot or similar)? Preferably 1080/1440/4k spread.
I havent watched that video yet but ill take a look
It's a link to multiple videos of many games using 390X, 980, 970, OC, stock, etc.
I wholly agree with your statement on who has the best deals on the market, but saying the 390x is faster than the 980 is incorrect, IMO. A 390x is faster than a stock 980 at 1440p and 4k, but stock 980's are uncommon and even then 980's overclock and easily to surpass the 390x at 1440p and at 4k. It's still not worth the $120 price difference though.
Nvidia's pricing strategy has been really, really interesting. I think they've done a TREMENDOUS job of moving the psychological price barrier higher by making the 980 TI the best bargain in their lineup. Had the 980 been more appropriately priced since the 980 TI's arrival ($400 instead of $500+), I'd wager that less people would have bit the bullet and spent the extra $200-250 for the 980 TI. For Nvidia's part, it looks like it's paying off on their bottom dollar. Prepare for GP104 to be $599-649.
Congrats. What about the coil whine, does it have any?
I'd be more excited about the Nano if there were better cases for it easily available. If there were, I'd move a build to it. Because HBM will allow for far smaller cards now, and my whole case is just empty space.