PDA

View Full Version : ATI Technologies Claims World’s 3DMark05 Record.



zippyjuan
06-03-2005, 12:49 PM
ATI Technologies Claims World’s 3DMark05 Record.
ATI’s CrossFire System Scores 15 498 in 3DMark05

Category: Video

by Anton Shilov

[ 06/02/2005 | 11:57 PM ]


ATI Technologies proclaimed the world’s record 3DMark05 score that was achieved by the company’s CrossFire platform featuring two presumably overclocked graphics cards. The new record is 15 498 marks, which is around 6% higher compared to the previous record held by a multi-GPU system based on NVIDIA GeForce 6800 Ultra SLI platform.


The system that attained the world’s top 3DMark05 score to date was powered by an ATI RADEON XPRESS 200 CrossFire Edition mainboard, a RADEON X850 XT-series graphics card as well as a RADEON X850 CrossFire Edition graphics card, both were allegedly overclocked substantially over default clock-speeds. Usually systems that set records are equipped with AMD Athlon 64 FX processors running at speeds higher than default as well as high-performance memory modules. The record-breaking machines are typically cooled down using nitrogen or cascade cooling systems.

ATI did not disclose any peculiarities of the testing, such as clock-speeds of the graphics cards and the processor. The company also did not reveal driver version it used; driver version is important because Futuremark, the creator of the 3DMark benchmarks, certifies new driver releases ensuring there are no 3DMark-specific optimizations to artificially boost scores.

Previous 3DMark05 record was 14623, set on a computer that was based on AMD Athlon 64 FX-55 processor overclocked to 3444MHz speed, DFI NF4 mainboard and two ASUS GeForce 6800 Ultra boards clocked at 627MHz/1404MHz for core/memory.

ATI CrossFire platform consists of ATI RADEON XPRESS 200 CrossFire Edition core-logic, ATI RADEON X800/X850-series graphics card as well as ATI RADEON X800/X850-series CrossFire Edition graphics card equipped with Compositing Engine, a special set of chips that blends parts of frames rendered by different graphics cards. ATI RADEON XPRESS chipsets code-named RD400 and RD480 for Intel and AMD processors respectively support the latest processors and memory types. Mainboards featuring the chipsets are claimed to support all the latest I/O technologies, such as Serial ATA II, and are advertised as “built for the enthusiast”.

The CrossFire offers different patterns to boost performance of two graphics cards and also offers ways to improve image quality through advanced antialiasing patterns never before seen on desktop computers.

ATI RADEON XPRESS 200 CrossFire Edition mainboards will be available from ATI’s partners beginning in June, whereas RADEON X850 CrossFire Edition graphics cards will be in production end of June and available mid-July. RADEON X800 CrossFire Edition cards will be available early August, ATI said.

Thesifer
06-03-2005, 01:26 PM
Im holding out with my TI4600 For atleast another Card or two.. So It will be a really noticeable difference.. (course Ill also have to upgrade my mobo at the same time) .. and while im at it .. Processor.. and Ram.. Etc etc etc :throw:

zippyjuan
06-03-2005, 02:16 PM
While I do get the urge to upgrade when something neat comes out, I have to remind myself that what I have now is very good and as long as it is working find and can handle what I use it for, I really don't need to upgrade. I have upped my memory to 1gb, but for now the rest is great.
Athlon XP2400
1Gb Corsair XMS ddr 400 matched for dual channel
Asus A7N8X mobo (Nforce2)
Radeon 9700 np

The only thing is I will probably need is another harddrive. The 80gb one I have is suddenly looking smaller when I am taking so many pictures.

The "record setting" machines are state of the art and even that is severely over-clocked so they mean nothing in the real world.

Showtime
06-03-2005, 02:22 PM
Yep, those systems are like the drag racers or computers and sometimes only get one or two good runs before frying something.

-j

Bires
06-03-2005, 03:03 PM
My Radeon9800P runs everything great, since I don't use res's higher than 1024x768 (for refresh rate purposes)

That..and artificial benchmark programs irritate me. :2far:

Showtime
06-03-2005, 03:08 PM
My Radeon9800P runs everything great, since I don't use res's higher than 1024x768 (for refresh rate purposes)

Yep, that dell ws was my reason for my last complete upgrade. Which may have been the only completely new rig I ever built. Try ws and you might see my slight fascination with some of the newer cards. Now if I only had the time/motivation to actually play those games in ws.

-j

bachviet
06-03-2005, 09:16 PM
My 6600GT is good enough to drive 2 LCDs at high resolution. :D