Amd radeon r7 (kaveri)

Dual Graphics: Does Kaveri Fix CrossFire’s Problems?

If you’re not already familiar with AMD’s Dual Graphics technology, you can think of it as a form of CrossFire that pairs an APU and discrete GPU to extract additional performance. The company started touting Dual Graphics back in the Llano days, so we published an in-depth examination of its inner workings back in August of last year ().

Back then, we observed that Fraps suggested that the add-in GPU was adding a lot of extra speed. However, our video-based FCAT testing showed a lot of those new frames were getting dropped and chopped off, ultimately yielding an experience no better than integrated graphics operating on its own. To demonstrate this phenomenon to our readers, we captured lossless video from the graphics card and uploaded it to YouTube with instructions on how to watch at 60 Hz. If you want more information, and haven’t already seen the story we wrote, you owe it to yourself to check it out. 

It took a few months, but AMD says it addressed the problem in its beta Catalyst 13.35 driver. We didn’t have much time to prepare for this piece, but we did manage to test with Tomb Raider, BioShock Infinite, and The Elder Scrolls V: Skyrim. Previously, all three games fared well in Fraps and fell on their faces during our FCAT analysis.

We begin with Tomb Raider. These results were recorded using FCAT, so dropped and runt frames are excluded; the results can be believed because we’re pulling the output straight from the DVI port.

There’s an almost-100% boost with Dual Graphics enabled. But before we get too excited, let’s look at frame time variance:

Latencies appear low, and lower is better. But to make sure our quantitative data corresponds to what we see, let’s revisit the video like we did in our previous Dual Graphics analysis.

Our video jives with the data we collected; Dual Graphics appears to work much better in Tomb Raider than it did on AMD’s previous-gen platform.

Next up is BioShock Infinite, which has also been problematic in the past.

Frame rates clearly jump in BioShock thanks to Dual Graphics, though we do observe more of that nasty frame time variance.

The last title we had time for was The Elder Scrolls V: Skyrim.

FCAT tells us that Skyrim’s average frame rate is up with Dual Graphics enabled. However, the game’s minimum performance level doesn’t increase. A look at frame rate over time reveals a couple of valleys, one of which corresponds to a spike in the frame time variance chart. Worse, the Dual Graphics comparison video doesn’t look any smoother than the A8-7600 or Radeon R7 240 on their own. If anything, it even looks choppier at times.

Skyrim is known for its frame time variance issues, and we’ve seen other dual-GPU configurations behave strangely in the game. Although we plan to write a more thorough follow-up to our first excursion with Dual Graphics, we’re at least glad that frame pacing appears enabled in the company’s driver. As for the value analysis, we have to save that for next time.

Рейтинг
( Пока оценок нет )
Editor
Editor/ автор статьи

Давно интересуюсь темой. Мне нравится писать о том, в чём разбираюсь.

Понравилась статья? Поделиться с друзьями:
RozBlog
Добавить комментарий

;-) :| :x :twisted: :smile: :shock: :sad: :roll: :razz: :oops: :o :mrgreen: :lol: :idea: :grin: :evil: :cry: :cool: :arrow: :???: :?: :!: