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April 28th, 2012

NVIDIA Launches GeForce GTX 690 For $999

NVIDIA Launches GeForce GTX 690 For $999 geforce gtx 690 NVIDIA has just officially announced their newest graphics card from GeForce 600 Series. The GeForce GTX 690 is dual-gpu card based on 28nm Kepler GK104 core and is now considered the fastest graphics card available on the market. Prepare your motherboard — because it’s big, prepare your power supply — because it’s power hungry, prepare your wallet — because it’s not cheap.

If you ever wondered how it is to have two GTX 680 cards connected in SLI mode, but your motherboard didn’t have enough space, or your power supply couldn’t feed 400 Watts of power, then NVIDIA has just came up with a new solution for you. The GeForce GTX 690 will provide performance of two GTX 680s, will consume as low as 300W, will only take two slots and finally — it will cost you $999. Some may say, it’s insane to buy such an expensive card, but believe me, it will be capable of running any game with top quality on multiple monitors for quite some time.

So what is GeForce GTX 690? NVIDIA has packed it up with two GK104 GPUs on one board. It requires two 8-pin power connectors and will consume around 300 Watts (that’s more than your first rigs..). It will therefore provide great overall performance.

GeForce GTX 690 cooler is made of cast aluminum with trivalent chromium plating. The central fan housing is created from injection molded magnesium alloy keeping it from vibrations. Fan will have 3000 RPM itself, but NVIDIA claims it won’t be noisy at all. They invented new cooling technology called dual-water chambers. Card was built on twelve-layer PCB.

Card has imprinted GeForce GTX 690 signature, and when it is in use it has a LED GeForce GTX signature lightning up. NVIDIA has also released new technology called GeForce Experience, which will officially be announced on June 6h. It is cloud based PC configurations optimization trough sophisticated data centers. Idea is quite simple, GeForce cards will be connected to some external server, which will provide the best available settings for your computer. It will be optimized for best performance by controlling texture quality, tessellation, anisotropic filtering and anti-aliasing. Also it will be a platform to keep your components up to date.

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GeForce GTX 690 Introduction by James Wang (GeForce.com)

When NVIDIA set out to build the Kepler GPU architecture more than four years ago, our primary focus was power efficiency. We found that processors were increasingly being limited by the amount of power they could consume and dissipate. The only way to improve performance was to be able to do more work with the same amount of power.

That was our focus with Kepler, and when the GeForce GTX 680 launched last month, reviewers praised not only its record-setting performance, but also its incredible power efficiency.

Bjorn3D, a website that has tested graphics cards since the Voodoo era, summed it up nicely when it said: “Not only is the Nvidia GeForce GTX 680 the fastest single GPU card, but it is also the most power efficient and quietest high-end flagship card we have ever tested here at Bjorn3D.”

While power efficiency is important to high-performance graphics cards, it becomes critical when building dual-GPU graphics cards. Here, two GPUs must vie for a finite amount of power, cooling, and board space. And it is here that Kepler shines the most.

The new GeForce GTX 690 is NVIDIA’s flagship graphics card. Powered by two Kepler GPUs, it’s both a record setter in 3D performance and incredibly power efficient. In fact, the GeForce GTX 690’s performance is almost identical to a pair of GeForce GTX 680s in SLI, but with significantly reduced power and noise.

Not content with delivering only raw performance, our engineers went a step further. From Ferrari’s F12 Berlinetta to the B&W’s Nautilus loudspeaker, the flagship of any product category is invariably as much about form as it is about function. With the GeForce GTX 690, our engineers and industrial designers set out to create a new visual aesthetic to express the raw, uncompromising power of a dual-GPU Kepler graphics card.

Industrial Design

The industrial design of the GeForce GTX 690 is a direct reflection of what lies beneath the cover: two Kepler GPUs, tremendous graphics horsepower, and a product of exceptional longevity. Visually, the design draws parallels to an F1 engine block with its raw metal look and exposed fin stacks.

The card’s front plate is composed of two different materials. The exterior frame is made of cast aluminum with trivalent chromium plating, giving the board a durable, matte finish. The central fan housing is created from injection molded magnesium alloy. Magnesium alloys are used throughout the automotive and aerospace industry (including the engines of the Bugatti Veyron and F-22 Raptor) for their light weight, heat dissipation, and acoustic dampening properties. To create the intricate geometries required for the fan housing, we used a form of injection molding called thixomolding, in which liquid magnesium alloy is injected into a mold. This allows us to create fine geometries and a tight, perfectly coupled fit.
Cooling and Acoustics

The overall experience of gaming on a high-performance graphics card is very much influenced by its heat and noise output. The ideal card is fast, but stays cool and quiet.

NVIDIA Launches GeForce GTX 690 For $999 geforce gtx 690

The GeForce GTX 690 is cooled via a pair of custom vapor chamber heat sinks. Unlike a traditional heat sink that uses conduction to move heat away from the GPU, a vapor chamber exploits the superior heat conducting characteristics of evaporation. Inside each vapor chamber is a small amount of purified water. As the GPU heats up, the water evaporates, carrying away heat in the process. Once the vapor reaches the top of the fin stack, it cools, condenses, and the process repeats itself. It’s similar to a miniature form of water cooling but, because the liquid is entirely self contained, there’s no need for tubing and no chance of leaks.

Channeling air through the heat sinks is a center-mounted axial fan. The smoother the airflow, the lower the noise output. Here, our engineers spent considerable effort optimizing the fin pitch and angle at which the air hits the fin stack. The area directly underneath the fan is carved with low-profile channels to encourage smooth airflow and all components under the fan are low-profile so they won’t cause turbulence or obstruct airflow. Our acoustic engineers also fine-tuned the fan’s control software so changes in fan speed occur gradually rather than in discrete steps.

The sum total of these efforts is not only in lower noise output, but also a less-perceptible noise. By eliminating board clutter, high-frequency sounds are removed. When you listen to the fan alone, it’s clean and smooth.

Performance

A dual-GPU graphics card is similar to two-way SLI condensed into a single graphics card. Historically, though, the dual-GPU card has always lagged behind its SLI counterpart in terms of performance. When two GPUs are brought onto the same card, their combined heat output outstrips the capacity of even the most capable cooler. As a result, clock speeds must be lowered. For example, in the Fermi generation, the fastest single-GPU graphics card had a graphics clock speed of 722 MHz and a memory data rate of 4008MHz. On the dual-GPU card, the graphics clock was 607 MHz and the memory data rate was 3212 MHz.

This is where Kepler’s fanatical focus on power efficiency pays off most handsomely. The GPUs on the GeForce GTX 690 have a boost clock of 1019 MHz, just a hair (2.8%) shy of the GeForce GTX 680 at 1058 MHz. What’s more, all other specs are identical; the number of cores, memory speed, and memory bandwidth per GPU are the same on both cards.

What this means is that the GeForce GTX 690 performs more or less just like a pair of GeForce GTX 680s in SLI; almost nothing was compromised in bringing two Kepler GPUs to the same board.

GeForce GTX 690 Specifications

CUDA Cores 3072
Base Clock 915 MHz
Boost Clock 1019 MHz
Memory Configuration 4GB / 512-bit GDDR5
Memory Speed 6.0 Gbps
Power Connectors 8-pin + 8-pin
TDP 300W
Outputs 3x DL-DVIMini-DisplayPort 1.2
Bus Interface PCI Express 3.0

In gaming performance, the GeForce GTX 690 is truly amazing, playing almost all of today’s games at maximum settings with little effort. To really stretch its legs, you want to hook up three monitors and play your favorite games at 5760 x 1080, in NVIDIA Surround mode or, better still, in NVIDIA 3D Vision Surround.

NVIDIA Launches GeForce GTX 690 For $999 geforce gtx 690

In the games above, the GeForce GTX 690 is on average 75% faster than the GeForce GTX 680.

Quad SLI

Despite the stupendous performance of the GeForce GTX 690, some gamers are destined to clamor for more. That’s where Quad SLI comes in. When two GeForce GTX 690s are connected via an SLI motherboard, four GPUs work in unison in Quad SLI mode. Each GPU works on a distinct frame for a total of four frames in flight at a given time. The resulting performance is simply otherworldly.

NVIDIA Launches GeForce GTX 690 For $999 geforce gtx 690

In Battlefield 3, at 2560 x 1600 with all settings maxed out, the framerate exceeds 120 FPS. Crysis 2 runs just shy of 100 FPS. And in the most demanding game, Metro 2033, the performance scales almost linearly to reach 56 FPS.

Quad SLI improves performance by 50-90% in graphically intensive titles.

Smoother Edges and Smoother Framerates

NVIDIA FXAA and Adaptive V-Sync, two technologies we introduced at the GeForce GTX 680 launch, become even more useful on the GeForce GTX 690.

Gaming at high resolutions, especially in Surround mode, consumes a large amount of memory. Traditional MSAA, which typically consumes 4x the memory, often becomes impractical to use. FXAA, on the other hand, consumes no additional memory and achieves comparable if not superior results, making it possible to game at oversized resolutions with antialiasing enabled.

FXAA in Portal 2. Click here for a zoomed 4xMSAA vs. FXAA comparison.

Similarly, Adaptive V-Sync, which toggles V-Sync on and off depending on the frame rate, is a natural partner to the GeForce GTX 690. At very high frame rates, frames tear not just in two, but into multiple, discrete bands. With Adaptive V-Sync enabled, a solid 60 FPS can be maintained without tearing. And should the frame rate dip below 60, V-Sync is dynamically disabled to prevent stuttering.

Improved Frame rate Metering

Kepler introduces hardware based frame rate metering, a technology that helps to minimize stuttering. In SLI mode, two GPUs share the workload by operating on successive frames; one GPU works on the current frame while the other GPU works on the next frame. But because the workload of each frame is different, the two GPUs will complete their frames at different times. Sending the frames to the monitor at varying intervals can result in perceived stuttering.

The GeForce GTX 690 features a metering mechanism (similar to a traffic meter for a freeway entrance) to regulate the flow of frames. By monitoring and smoothing out any disparities in how frames are issued to the monitor, frame rates feel smoother and more consistent.

Conclusion

The work of integrating two full fledged-GPUs onto a single board is a tremendous engineering challenge. It is a perpetual tug of war between the constraints of performance, power, heat, and noise. The end product is almost always a compromise.

The GeForce GTX 690 may very well be the first dual-GPU graphics card that emerged in full form, free from compromise. It’s the world’s fastest graphics card by a wide margin. It’s quieter and consumes less power than its predecessor. It’s crammed with features that eliminate jaggies and sustains smooth framerates. And to top it off, it’s made of the finest materials, expertly constructed, and with a look that speaks directly of the power that is housed within.

At a MSRP of $999, it’s not a graphics card for everyone. But for enthusiasts who demand the very best and gamers who want a graphics card that will last for generations, the GeForce GTX 690 represents the ultimate in gaming from NVIDIA.

  • Jerome

    I think I will just buy another GTX 680

  • mercurycc
  • Blabla

    Am I correct to believe the first graph shows the GTX 690 playing “Metro 2033″ at over 60 FPS but the second graph shows the same card in SLI, same game with below 60 FPS ???

    How could that be ???

  • BestJinjo

    The most expensive NV card since $830 8800 GTX Ultra? Looks like GK110 Big Kepler will be launched as GTX780, maybe even next year. 

  • Piga86

    “If you ever wondered how it is have NOT one GTX 680 card, imigine have Not Two.”:)Cuz is getting hard to find one, and now Nvidia making two…”to have Not”, probably….

  • http://twitter.com/the_real_vlad vlad

    im looking for the answer to this too

  • Muta_gwef

    Well this actually looks like the first dual GPU card that wasn’t an afterthought “hey lets stick two of them on one PCB, bit of sticky tape and glue here and that should do!” From the sounds of it they actually engineered this far better than I have seen with any previous dual chip card, however, it’s clear scaling performance still has a way to go. I guess if you have $1,000 burning a hole in your pocket then go for it!

  • californian3

    And most of all after amd will release 7990, Nvidia will release the Hidden Ace. Gk110 chip.

  • BestJinjo

    I think they just tested that particular game at different settings. Their goal is to show % increase form a single GTX680. So they could manipulate the settings to suit their needs to show the largest % increase. However, the 2nd graph may actually be running Metro with DOF + Tessellation and everything maxed out. That’s my guess. Metro is insanely unoptimized.

    You guys can check out Computerbase . de for their review. Here is what they got with EVERYTHING MAXED OUT at 2560×1600 4AA in Metro 2033:

    GTX680 = 17.6 fpsHD7970 = 20.2 fps
    GTX680 SLI = 30.2 fpsHD7970 CF = 39.7 fpsThat’s why not even 4 GTX680s (i.e., dual 690s) can get to 60 fps!!! This game is nuts. 

  • BestJinjo

    I think they are saving that for next year, and going to release it as GTX780. NV doesn’t need to release a 500mm^2 “mythical” GK110 chip this year since they have already beaten AMD in fastest single-GPU and single-Card segments. They can instead use whatever 28nm wafer capacity they have to manufacture as many GTX680s as they can and make more profit on them since they are only a 256-bit bus card with 294mm^2 chip. Far more profitable than making a 500mm^2 / 384 or 512-bit bus chip!!

  • BestJinjo

    Ya, good point. They did go out of their way to put nice materials on it such as aluminum and magnesium. However, I still think for $1000, it should have had 4GB VRAM since this is the type of card that can actually be used for 3D vision gaming (it does have 3x DL-DVI connectors). Otherwise, if I was in the market to spend that much, I’d much rather get 2x GTX680 4GB for $100 more. 

  • Francmic000

    Perhaps the rumblings of the 500mm^2 card are coming from a future tesla card?  Its not outside the realm of possibility.

  • BestJinjo

    Ya possibly. Given that GTX680s are flying off the shelves in North America at $500+ a piece, NV is in no rush to sell GK110 (even if that card can be manufactured). If they could, they’d sell it for $3-5K in Tesla markets. I agree with you. Perhaps we won’t even see it until Q1 2013 in the consumer space, or otherwise. Coincidentally, the games I am most looking forward to this year (SC2 HofS, Diablo 3, Bioshock Infinite and Dishonored don’t even appear to be that GPU demanding). I will prob. skip upgrading this generation until games get more demanding (i.e., Crysis 3). 

  • http://videocardz.com/ VideoCardz.com

     James Wang posted this:
    Hi,The
    second graph was from a different setup than the first. We are
    re-running it now based on the first system and will update the graph
    when done.

    Thanks for spotting the inconsistency.-James

  • headloser

    i wonder if they will included a carrying case like they had for the ASUS ARES 4GB Limited Edition Video Card.  For $999.00 USA dollars i better have one plus a lifetime warranty.