If you spent over a grand on a Titan X card a few months ago then you might want to flip through the next couple of pages and pretend you haven’t seen them.
We knew there would be a GeForce GTX 1080 Ti, of course – we carried this very warning at the end of our Titan X review, as Nvidia has undermined its Titan cards a few months after their launches for several GPU generations now. This time, though, the GTX 1080 Ti doesn’t sit under the Titan; it actually beats it, while costing around £400 less money.
The two cards are based on the same 16nm GP102 Pascal GPU core, but with a few little adjustments here and there. For example, the GTX 1080 Ti only comes with 11GB of GDDR5X memory, compared to 12GB on the Titan X, but that 1GB will make no difference in current games, even at 4K. The change in memory configuration also means the GTX 1080 Ti has a slightly narrower memory interface, going from the Titan’s 384-bit bus to a 352-bit bus, and it also has 88 ROPs, compared to 96 on the Titan X.
These small changes to the memory configuration are unlikely to make much difference in games anyway, especially when the GTX 1080 Ti has an 11GHz (effective) memory frequency, compared to 10GHz for the Titan X, meaning the GTX 1080 Ti effectively has even more memory bandwidth at its disposal.
Otherwise, the GPU is the same, featuring six graphics processing clusters (GPCs), giving you a total of 28 streaming multiprocessors, which divides further into 3,584 stream processors.
The stock clock speed has also been pushed up a bit on the GTX 1080 Ti, with a 1408MHz base clock (1582MHz boost), compared to a 1417MHz base clock (1531MHz boost) on the Titan X. Based on previous releases, we were expecting the GTX 1080 Ti to be a cut-down Titan X, perhaps with one GPC disabled, but in actuality, the GTX 1080 Ti should be the faster card in games, despite its significantly lower price tag.
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Denne historien er fra June 2017-utgaven av Custom PC.
Start din 7-dagers gratis prøveperiode på Magzter GOLD for å få tilgang til tusenvis av utvalgte premiumhistorier og 9000+ magasiner og aviser.
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Games Of 2017
Rick Lane forecasts the next 12months’ big hitters
Vive & Learn
Joe martin describes the pains and pleasures of using the htc vive’s room-scale virtual reality system at home
Readers' Drives Spec-Edge
Inspired by Mirror’s Edge Catalyst, Johan Nyman gave his components a splash of red and white paint, and assembled this gorgeous themed build
Asus ROG Strix Z270i Gaming/£184 incVAT
Costing £184 inc VAT, the Asus ROG Strix Z270i Gaming is the priciest Z270 mini-ITX board available.
Edifier R2000DB/£180 incVAT
Edifier makes a whole range of premium stereo PC speakers, with the R2000DB sitting roughly in the middle when it comes to price.
The 4k Multi-GPU Challenge
Ben hard widge teams uptwo xfx rade on rx4808gb cards to see if they can give you 4k gaming on a budget
The Fall And Rise Of White Wolf
Rick Lane looks at how one of the most eminent pen and paper RPG publishers is being reborn for a new, virtual generation.
Nvidia GeForce GTX 1080 Ti Founders Edition
If you spent over a grand on a Titan X card a few months ago then you might want to flip through the next couple of pages and pretend you haven’t seen them.
Cobra
Rick Lane speaks to David Braben about the changes to Frontier’s tech since the launch of Elite Dangerous.
Ryzen Is A Strong Comeback For AMD
But the CPU isn’t a critical component any more, argues James Gorbold.