HappySqurriel said: For Sony and Microsoft I would expect their entire systems to run in the 80-120 Watt range, with the CPU accounting for (roughly) 1/3 of that and the GPU accounting for the other (roughly) 2/3. This would put the CPU using roughly 25 to 40 Watts, and the GPU using roughly 55 to 80 watts. |
To put some perspective here, let me post this wikipedia info
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Xbox_360_hardware#List_of_revisions
Codename
|
CPU | GPU | HDMI | Power Supply | In Production | Date Released |
Xenon | 90 nm | 90 nm | No | 203 W | No | November 2005 |
Zephyr | 90 nm | 90 nm | Yes | 203 W | No | July 2007 |
Falcon | 65 nm | 90 nm | Yes | 175 W | No | Late September 2007 |
Opus | 65 nm | 90 nm | No | 175 W | No | June 2008 |
Jasper | 65 nm | 65 nm | Yes | 150 W | No | September 2008 |
Trinity (Valhalla) | 45 nm (combined "Vejle" chip)[27] | Yes | 135 W | No | June 2010 | |
Corona | 45 nm (combined chip)[28] | Yes | 115 W | Yes | August 2011 |
The first Xbox360 used +200W and the newest one, with all the optimizations, the single chip for both the CPU and GPU, etc still uses more than 100W.
Even including the efficency of the power supply, that's still a lot.
Please excuse my bad English.
Currently gaming on a PC with an i5-4670k@stock (for now), 16Gb RAM 1600 MHz and a GTX 1070
Steam / Live / NNID : jonxiquet Add me if you want, but I'm a single player gamer.