NVIDIA GeForce GTX 1080 Ti: What Makes The GPU Stand Apart From Its Competitors [VIDEO]
Bits of gossip about the GTX 1080 Ti have been flowing for a considerable length of time. The product was unavoidable, yet taking a gander at late history, the 780 Ti turned out six months after the 780 and the 980 Ti was propelled nine months after the 980 and three months after the Titan X. Maybe more critically, 780 Ti turned out just before AMD's R9 290X dispatch, and the 980 Ti was released just before AMD's Fury X.
It's a well-known fact that AMD is preparing to launch its new Vega GPUs, with a Q2'17 release date. AMD's Capsaicin occasion is likewise happening today. To state that opposition between the two principle GPU sellers is wild just starts to begin to expose what's underneath. Nvidia has the lion's share of the committed GPU market, and it's not going to sit inactively by sitting tight for AMD. Thus yet again, Nvidia is appearing another Ti part, the GTX 1080 Ti, appropriating Vega by two or three months, reports PC Gamer.
Similarly, as with the earlier top-rack Ti cards, GTX 1080 Ti looks similar like the Titan X Pascal (Titan "XP" for short from here on), with a couple changes. What's more, how about simply toss this tidbit out there: the greater part of the alleged "dependable" bits of gossip on the GTX 1080 Ti specs weren't right. Fans saw bits of gossip about 9Gbps GDDR5 rather than 11Gbps GDDR5X, center tallies going from 3200 to 3584, and guesses at clock speeds from 1400MHz to 1700MHz, reports Polygon.
For the GPU clocks, Nvidia hasn't given any exact numbers, just a regular lift clock of 1.6GHz. That will presumably be some unusual number like 1607MHz, and fans don't have the foggiest idea about the base clock, however, the general process is unquestionably higher than Titan X. Nvidia has moreover enhanced the cooling, and says overclocking to at least 2ghz on the stock cooling is conceivable.
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