Zotac GeForce GT 640 DDR3 Review: Glacial Gaming & Heavenly HTPC
by Ryan Smith & Ganesh T S on June 20, 2012 12:00 PM ESTHTPC Aspects : What is New?
We covered discrete HTPC GPUs in detail last year, and noted that the GT 520 was the sign of interesting things to come from NVIDIA.
The GT 520 was the first GPU from NVIDIA to come with support for VDPAU Feature Set D (also called as VP5 by some). VP5 is faster than VP4 and also brings support for decode of 4K x 2K videos. Unfortunately, the GT 520 didn't have the necessary hardware to output 4K resolution over any of its video outputs. The number of shaders in the GT 520 was also too low to support advanced deinterlacing algorithms. On the whole, despite the updated video processing engine (VPU), we couldn't recommend the GT 520 as the ideal discrete HTPC GPU.
All our concerns were supposed to be laid to rest with the launch of the Kepler series. NVIDIA started off at the high end with the GTX 680, a card which couldn't be called HTPC-friendly by any stretch of imagination. The more HTPC-friendly GK107 did see a simultaneous launch, but in mobile-only form as the 640M.
Given the configuration of GK107, it appeared likely that a desktop version would tick off all the boxes necessary for a HTPC. Does the Zotac GT 640 fulfill our expectations? The short answer is: Yes, it does! It improves upon the performance of the GT 430 with respect to madVR, thanks to the extra computational power and memory bandwidth. Meanwhile the updates to the video outputs (HDMI PHYs) and the retention of the VPU from the GT 520 enable decode and display of 4K videos in their native resolution.
However, these updates don't mean that NVIDIA's GPUs are perfect for HTPCs. Just like every other HTPC GPU vendor out there, NVIDIA has a list of things which need to be fixed from a HTPC perspective, which we'll dive into in a moment.
Another important update present in the Kepler series is the on-board H.264 encoder. The practice of integrating a H.264 encoder in the GPU was started by Intel in Sandy Bridge. While Intel has the second generation version of QuickSync in the Ivy Bridge processors, AMD and NVIDIA are just now starting to ship their first generation encoders (VCE and NVENC respectively).
Both VCE and NVENC are yet to gain widespread support amongst the software vendors, and NVIDIA themselves indicated that full support for NVENC in CyberLink's and ArcSoft's offerings would be coming sometime next month. Keeping this in mind, we have decided to postpone NVENC coverage to a later date.
In the next few sections, we will look at the HTPC aspects of the Zotac GT 640. Before delving further into that, the details of our testbed are provided below:
Zotac GT 640 HTPC Testbed Setup | |
Processor / GPU | Intel Core i7-3770K - 3.50 GHz (Turbo to 3.9 GHz) |
Zotac GT 640 | |
Motherboard | Asus P8H77-M Pro uATX |
OS Drive | Seagate Barracuda XT 2 TB |
Secondary Drive | Kingston SSDNow V+ 128 GB SATA II SSD SNV325-S2/128GB |
Memory | G.SKILL ECO Series 4GB (2 x 2GB) SDRAM DDR3 1333 (PC3 10666) F3-10666CL7D-4GBECO CAS 9-9-9-24 |
Case | Antec VERIS Fusion Remote Max |
Power Supply | Antec TruePower New TP-550 550W |
Operating System | Windows 7 Ultimate x64 SP1 |
Display / AVR | Sony VPL-VW 1000ES |
Sony KDL46EX720 + Pioneer Elite VSX-32 | |
Acer H243H | |
Graphics Drivers | GeForce R300 Series v301.42 WHQL |
Softwares | CyberLink PowerDVD 12 |
MPC-HC 1.6.2.4902 | |
LAV Filters 0.50.5 | |
madVR 0.82.5 | |
. |
Note that we used three different HDMI sinks for our testing. While the fancy Sony VPL-VW 1000ES was used to test out 4K resolution output, the Sony KDL46EX720 + Pioneer VSX-32 was used to verify HD audio bitstreaming. The rest of the tests (including HQV benchmarking) were performed with the Acer H243H monitor.
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extide - Wednesday, June 20, 2012 - link
For posting folding benchmarks! A lot of people really appreciate that!Zink - Wednesday, June 20, 2012 - link
+1No one else uses your benchmarking tool and it doesn't always correlate to performance with current F@H projects but that is the only reason I care about GPUs.
Marlin1975 - Wednesday, June 20, 2012 - link
Good design if it had DDR5. If they can do 2gig of DDR5 then it be a great mid-price card.Homeles - Wednesday, June 20, 2012 - link
It would still be terrible until the price dropped.Samus - Thursday, June 21, 2012 - link
There's no reason this wouldn't be similar in speed to a GTX460 if it had DDR5. The only difference would be 128-bit vs 192-bit memory bus, everything else would be an advantage: same number cores, substantially higher clock speed, lower power consumption increasing overclocking headroom, etc.MrSpadge - Thursday, June 21, 2012 - link
You forget: substantially lower shader clock speed, more coarse shader grouping -> more difficult to use them all at once, and software scheduling -> need a better compiler, can't do runtime optimizations.t_case - Wednesday, June 20, 2012 - link
So who has the Sony VPL-vw1000ES? Now that's a nice projector... only roughly the price of a new car heh.stephenasmith - Wednesday, June 20, 2012 - link
I love me some painfully slow gaming!nitrousoxide - Wednesday, June 20, 2012 - link
Just curious if the most powerful IGP can keep up with entry-level KeplerRoland00Address - Wednesday, June 20, 2012 - link
But this should get you an idea of what performance you would be getting with llano. (Numbers taken from Llano review that appeared 12 months ago so drivers will be old.)Crysis Warhead 1680x1050 performance quality
A8-6550D with 1600 mhz memory
58.8 fps
A8-6550D with 1866 mhz memory
62.5 fps
GT640
99.8 fps
This makes the 640 about 69.7% faster than a non overclock Llano (people are going to get 1600mhz memory).