ZOTAC GeForce GTX 670 AMP! Edition 2 GB Review 4

ZOTAC GeForce GTX 670 AMP! Edition 2 GB Review

Performance Summary »

Fan Noise

In the past years users would accept everything just to get more performance. Nowadays this has changed and people have become more aware of the fan noise and power consumption of their graphic cards.
In order to properly test the fan noise a card emits we are using a Bruel & Kjaer 2236 sound level meter (~$4,000) which has the measurement range and accuracy we are looking for.

Fan Noise Measurement Setup

The tested graphics card is installed in a system that is completely passively cooled. That is passive PSU, passive CPU cooler, passive cooling on the motherboard and a solid state drive.
This setup allows us to eliminate secondary noise sources and test only the video card. To be more compliant with standards like DIN 45635 (we are not claiming to be fully DIN 45635 certified) the measurement is conducted at 100 cm distance and 160 cm over the floor. The ambient background noise level in the room is well below 20 dBA for all measurements. Please note that the dBA scale is not linear, it is logarithmic. 40 dBA is not twice as loud as 20 dBA. A 3 dBA increase results in double the sound pressure. The human hearing is a bit different and it is generally accepted that a 10 dBA increase doubles the perceived sound level. The 3D load noise levels are tested with a stressful game, not Furmark.

Idle noise levels are the same as on the NVIDIA GTX 670 reference design, which is dissapointing. ZOTAC is using a high-quality triple slot cooler and it ends up as noisy as NVIDIA's low-cost dual-slot cooler. Clearly a sign that the fan seetinsg have not been optimized for the new cooler.

Fan noise under load is a bit lower, but not anywhere near what we have seen from other GTX 670 cards today, that just use a dual slot cooler.

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May 9th, 2024 17:31 EDT change timezone

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