2080Ti consumed about 50W more during tests comparing to 1080Ti. Nvidia also had higher system wattage requirement for that card vs 1080Ti.
May be things change in the bright, distant future, to better OR worse.
Your point? In theory power consumption drops but in practice...
USB power draw, audio card power draw (Who is using those nowadays anyway?)
Really?
The audio card on my motherboard drives my 4 channel transducer amplifier.
The 2nd audio card is a 7.1 card. It's optical out drives my 5.1 surround system for mirroring audio in VR when I have friends over.
Other people will run Crew Chief over their headset and use a second card to drive speakers for everything else.
The audio card you're using requires such little power that it's effectively a rounding error.
By the way. Why no Ryzen 7 or Ryzen 9?
@Jacco van der Zaag, that was a response to a different user, not sure why you quoted it.
On Freeesync, I posted the list of NVidia certified monitors, those should work 100%. If your monitor is not on the list, there is community supported spreadsheet with what works and what not.
On my WM UHD420 (4k, 42"), that is not on NVidia list, Freesync works flawlessly with EVGA 1080Ti.
Sorry to hear your experience was different, but that does not mean that NVidia support for FreeSync sucks in general, they wouldn't be certifying G-Sync compatible monitors otherwise, or have many happy users like myself.
Perhaps, not with what ROG packages in. This baby can drive high impedance headphones without breaking a sweat.The audio card you're using requires such little power that it's effectively a rounding error.