Asic quality gpu-z
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Open it, and select the card (if you have multiple cards) then right click on the title bar and choose "read ASIC quality". Nvidia has now been shown to use tile rendering in the Maxwell and Pascal microarchitectures for a limited amount of geometry. Note: The latest version of GPUz doesn't (or I haven't yet found out how to) show the ASIC quality, but version 0.8.5 does. Hi guys, if you have a AMD/nVidia GPU you can read the ASIC quality from GPUZ, open GPUZ, click the green icon on top left corner of the window, click Read ASIC quality, post it here with a screenshot of your GPUZ if possible, I need to do some research. All EVGA, one is "superclocked" so I expected better. I have never taken ASIC quality serious anyway and this is the nail in the coffin. The strange thing is I got totally different results between the two versions of GPUZ and it was a big difference 20 - 30.
![asic quality gpu-z asic quality gpu-z](https://dingyue.ws.126.net/2021/0826/2256fec1p00qyg1sj000jc000av00a4m.png)
The third card was not a Founder's edition, and it is 60.2%.ġ080s: 97.6% Dell/Alienware Founder's ed., 100%, EVGA Founder's ed., 60.2% EVGA base model.ġ070's: 60.2%, 60.2%, and 60.2%. I have just looked at the ASIC quality of my GPUs using both GPUZ 6.2 and GPUZ 6.6. Lower value means that you have for your money lower quality. If one has lower ASIC number worse card, this number determines how card will boost - and because current Nvidia cards are based on GPU boost number has important value. I am accustomed to seeing ASIC quality in the 57-88% range, but my first Founder's edition was 97.6%! Then the second Founder's edition arrived, and it was 100%. ASIC quality is not meaningles, it is significant number. EDIT: Apparently GPUz can't accurately read the ASIC score from a 10-series card yet, so much of this is now void. I recently ebay'd a 1080 or two or three for an average of $428 US each, and was shocked at my ASIC quality as reported by GPUz.