Message boards : Graphics cards (GPUs) : Will the price of Ampere GPUs drive down the value of their predecessors?
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With the RTX 3070 price of US$500, what will happen to used card prices? I started this thread to gather opinions. | |
ID: 55664 | Rating: 0 | rate: / Reply Quote | |
Great question. I just wondered about the very same. Just made a post a couple minutes earlier about thinking that the RTX 3070 is rather reasonably priced IMO. Especially comparing the initial performance benchmarks (vs. 2080/2080 Ti), I can't help but wonder how those prior generation cards can still uphold their prices. Especially with this year's fierce competition of the recently launched AMD cards and probably much better availably which will be an important factor impacting demand for NVIDIA's demand (Black Friday, Christmas), I only see one way... Prices of prior generations have to go down as soon as NVIDIA's current gen RTX 30xx series cards will reach a steady supply. And the competition from AMD will only help in the future to drive prices down which is great for us consumers. | |
ID: 55666 | Rating: 0 | rate: / Reply Quote | |
Unfortunately supply and demand still comes into play. Prices of the old cards will still remain high if you can’t even buy the new cards. It could be $100 but if there’s no stock, it’s not really relevant. | |
ID: 55669 | Rating: 0 | rate: / Reply Quote | |
Ian, I agree that memory is a major factor in the price of a graphics card. | |
ID: 55670 | Rating: 0 | rate: / Reply Quote | |
Some projects still use a large portion of VRAM. Einstein for example, some of their Gravitational wave tasks can use upwards of 3GB per task. And people like to run multiple WUs at a time in some cases. So even though GPUGRID doesn’t use a large amount of VRAM, some projects still do. | |
ID: 55671 | Rating: 0 | rate: / Reply Quote | |
Thanks for that info, I tried to join Einstein but never got the promised email response. Maybe because I don't have any cards with more than 4 GB. | |
ID: 55672 | Rating: 0 | rate: / Reply Quote | |
If you run Nvidia cards, the drivers come with a utility named nvidia-smi. Installed on both Windows and Linux systems. | |
ID: 55678 | Rating: 0 | rate: / Reply Quote | |
If you run Nvidia cards, the drivers come with a utility named nvidia-smi. Installed on both Windows and Linux systems. Thanks Keith, I'll check that out. Do you run it instead of the Afterburner hardware monitor? | |
ID: 55682 | Rating: 0 | rate: / Reply Quote | |
No I don't run Windows. But I do use the nvidia-smi utility all the time. | |
ID: 55683 | Rating: 0 | rate: / Reply Quote | |
Keith doesn't run windows. So he doesn't run Afterburner. I'm in the same boat. I'm pretty adverse to installing software I don't need on my crunching systems, I like to keep them with as minimal software payload as possible, so I'm pretty content with just using psensor for monitoring the cards, and using a custom script calling nvidia-smi to do things like power limiting and overclocking. | |
ID: 55685 | Rating: 0 | rate: / Reply Quote | |
Thanks for explaining the memory configs, I was clueless about that. Now I'm happily semi-clueless with some learning to do. | |
ID: 55686 | Rating: 0 | rate: / Reply Quote | |
Message boards : Graphics cards (GPUs) : Will the price of Ampere GPUs drive down the value of their predecessors?