mr91 :
All those cards are overclocked out of the box and has 2 8 pin connectors. " non reference"
Reference cards I believe 277 is the max however most likely they moved the power slider to 110 percent
I added those 4 cards because I already posted a pic of the reference card showing 277 watts. Every 980 Ti exceeds its TDP of 250 watts by more than 10%....
every 900 series card (well at least the 970, 980, 980 Ti) exceeds it's TDP, have no use for the others.
Tho I am not sure why you are trying to steer the discussion to being just about reference cards. These 4 cards are by no means "special", they are just the non-reference cards that everyone buys. Looking at newegg and the number of reviews for each, the non-reference cards outsell the reference versions by 10 to 20 to 1 depending on brand.
The OPs current build includes and Asus DCII which certainly is not a "reference card so we can see what the past preference has been. The OPS build includes a 3rd party cooler, so I can only assume he has no aversion to overclocking. The OPs question and the thread's title is "What is the
biggest Videocard that can work .."
The "biggest" with respect to either "performance" or "power draw" could in no way thought to be a reference card. But, again, it's immaterial as all 9xx series cards (970 - 980 Ti) .... both reference and non-reference, every one of them exceed their TDPs by at least 10% just playing games and not the most demanding games of today.
The 970's TDP is 145 watts but playing Metro LL:
Asus 970 Strix - 179 watts (23+% over TDP)
MSI 970 = 192 (32+% over TDP)
EVGA = 188 watts
The 980's TDP is 165 watts but playing Metro LL:
Reference = 184 watts (11+% over TDP)
Asus = 194 watts
MSI = 205 watts (24+% over TDP)
Gigabyte = 204 watts
And those numbers are just playing Metro LL at factory settings ....
1. Not what I would call one of today's most demanding games.
2. Not the highest load one can pull from the PSU.
3. Not with the up to 20% power increase we can expect via Afterburner.
mr91 :
http://www.bit-tech.net/hardware/graphics/2015/05/31/nvidia-geforce-gtx-980-ti-review/8
Total system power with a reference 980 ti 381 watts...
Thank you.
System in IDLE = 109 Watts
System Wattage with GPU in FULL Stress = 381 Watts
Difference (GPU load) = 272 Watts
Add average IDLE wattage ~10 Watts
Subjective obtained GPU power consumption = ~ 282 Watts
Almost 13% above 980 Ti's rated TDP and danged close to TechPowerUps measured 277 watts.
The definition of TDP has varied over time and isn't even the same between manufacturers. The generally accepted definition however is here:
http://compreviews.about.com/od/PC-Gaming/a/What-is-TDP.htm'
TDP stands for Thermal Design Power. And while many computer users may think it equates to the maximum amount of power a component can run at, that isn't the case. TDP is technically the max amount of power the cooling system needs to dissipate in order to keep the chip at or below its maximum temperature.
Clearly, the amount of heat removed by the cooler from the GPU is less than the total amount of heat generated by the entire card.
Clearly, unlike power, the cooling system needs to sustain an average of xxx watts to keep the system cool as while we see power needs fluctuating in response to load / Boost algorithms, temps do not. If you run Furmark, the temp curve will remain fairly constant whereas we see the "% of TDP" ranging from below 100% to 120% and higher even.
So while the cooling system need not respond to these variations, the power delivery system must. Otherwise performance will be diminished.
Back in 2010 or so, nVidia shook up the industry be releasing their own definition in a blurb to reviewers for the 5xx series cards. In it, they said something to the effect that "TDP is the maximum power draw over time in real world applications".
That clearly is not the case with the 9xx series as the actual measured results well prove.... but then again, how do we factor in "over time" ? Does over time mean playing the game over the course of an hour or playing the game over the course of an intense 5 minutes ?
The thing is, if you want the boost clock to work, you need the power headroom for the card to grab the power when it wants to boost; no power headroom = no boost.
But most importantly, if ya card dies and ya have to send in the receipt for the card, I wouldn't want to be sending in my newegg receipt that included a PSU less than the manufacturer's published / written recommendations:
http://www.geforce.com/hardware/desktop-gpus/geforce-gtx-980-ti/specifications
Thermal and Power Specs:
Maximum GPU Tempurature (in C) = 92 C
Graphics Card Power (W) = 250 W
Minimum System Power Requirement (W) = 600 W
Supplementary Power Connectors = 6-pin + 8-pin