Expreview have tried one of the most recent RTX 3060 illustrations cards of the LHR (Lite Hash Rate) nature, to observe precisely how cryptomining restricted these LHR cards are practically speaking – and whether there are execution contrasts for non-mining related responsibilities like gaming. The outcomes are fulfilling: the new RTX 3060 Lite Hash Rate puts out around 21 MH/s at 119 W – and it does as such from the start of the responsibility, which didn’t occur earlier, when NVIDIA’s answer was an inadequately executed driver check rather than another gadget ID (it began at 40 MH/s and afterward diminished until it hit the LHR roof). The RTX 3060 likewise didn’t show any presentation contrast contrasted with past, non-LHR cards in gaming benchmarks, which may reassure some planned purchasers.
Likewise spilled was the said RTX 3080 Ti mining score. Since this card is just coming out now, an approach to separate it from existing stock is superfluous. In any case, regardless of whether the RTX 3080 Ti doesn’t convey the LHR addition as does the RTX 3060 and in the end the 3070 and 3080 upon their re-delivery to the wild, it packs in a similar mining execution limiter. What’s more, the card was tried to convey around 58 MH/s at a 199 W board power. One ought to be mindful about expecting quick costs back available, as excavators shift their concentration towards the RTX cards effectively in the recycled market or the new CMP cards; one must be confident that the real gaming market is now all around outfitted with cards enough that hawkers can’t battle with the (ideal?) flood of stock on LHR cards.
Source: TPU