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Other Tech News The latest community based technology news from across the globe. (If you aren't a community newsposter then use the "Submit News" section.)

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Old Jun 5, 2004, 02:59 AM   #1
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New Power Connector Standard Among PCI-Ex Cards?

Question 1: What is NV45?

We've already answered this one, NV45 is basically NV40 + NVIDIA's HSI chip on a single package; in other words, NV45 is a PCI Express NV40.

Question 2: When is NV45 being released?

We've heard two different things from manufacturers. Some manufacturers have told us that NV45 will be available in August, while others have basically said that NV45 won't be out this year, instead we will see NV48 arrive as an AGP refresh to NV40 by Christmas.

What will most likely happen is that NVIDIA will determine the fate of NV45 by the acceptance (or lack thereof) of PCI Express this year. If the acceptance is low enough, NV45 will be pushed out to next year, otherwise we may see it in Q3/Q4. Regardless of what happens, it does seem like NV48 will be NVIDIA's fall refresh product, and that will be an AGP solution.

Question 3: What are NV45's clock speeds?

Currently it seems that NV45 is running slower than NV40, but there may be plans for NV45 to be clocked slightly higher. Again, this seems to be more dependent on what happens with sales of PCI Express chipsets.

Question 4: What is the strange power connector on NV45?

The power connector seen below on NV45 is what threw a lot of us off, but we've finally figured it out.

The power connector is basically another 12V power rail from the PSU, similar to the 4-pin power connector that Intel introduced with the Pentium 4. Although the connector could theoretically also be four pins (2 x 12V pins and 2 ground pins), in order to avoid people getting it confused with the 12V CPU connector it is made as a 6 pin connector block.

Currently you simply plug two 4-pin molex connectors into an adapter that then plugs into this new 6-pin connector, but in future ATX power supplies this connector will be present (just like the 4-pin CPU power connector became standard).
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Read More/Source: http://anandtech.com/showdoc.html?i=2068

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