![]() We said the following about the vanilla 3070, and it still holds true: But this modest serving of RAM may make AMD’s rival Radeon RX 6800 and its ample 16GB of GDDR6 more appealing, especially if you plan on playing at 4K. That amount should suffice for now, for most games at 1440p resolution-though some games, like Watch Dogs Legion, already blow past that even at 1440p with everything cranked. As with the non-Ti 3070, the decision is a bit concerning in an era when games are demanding more VRAM for high-res textures. That said, Nvidia still only gave this card 8GB of raw capacity (despite giving the $3 16GB of GDDR6). The extra VRAM speed helps the RTX 3070 Ti get a little more pep in its step in memory-constrained games, if you’re playing at the higher resolutions for which this card is built. The vanilla 3070 uses a standard non-X version of GDDR6 memory, which runs much slower, bringing its effective memory bandwidth down to 448GB/s. Nvidia sweetened the pot by equipping the Ti version with 8GB of cutting-edge GDDR6X memory, which rockets the card’s total memory bandwidth to a speedy 608GB/s. (By comparison, the other new Ti card, the RTX 3080 Ti, wound up only a few hundred CUDA cores short of the step-up 3090, and thousands ahead of the vanilla 3080-the opposite of this scenario.) A few hundred more cores gives a little extra oomph, as you’ll see in our benchmarks, but nothing game-changing. With 6,144 CUDA graphics cores, the RTX 3070 Ti only has a few hundred more than the 5,888 found in the vanilla 3070, but thousands fewer than the 8,704 CUDA present in the RTX 3080. The comparison that matters if you’re buying new is against the cards bracketing the 3070 Ti in Nvidia’s product stack. So if you’re looking to upgrade from a GTX 1070 Ti, this isn’t really an apples-to-apples comparison despite the similar branding. It’s worth mentioning that the price creep we’ve witnessed across all tiers of graphics card pricing (and mentioned at the end of our 3080 Ti review) continues here: The RTX 3070 Ti costs $600, while the RTX 2070 Super cost $500, while the GTX 1070 Ti cost $450. Nvidia compares the GeForce RTX 3070 Ti against last generation’s GeForce RTX 2070 Super in the specifications page it provided reviewers, as you can see below. So your curves should reflect that range, with intakes staying 30-50% faster than exhausts.GeForce RTX 3070 Ti specs, features, and price ![]() Sys_fans respond to case/motherboard temps, and those rarely reach 50☌, most will bounce around the 40°ish range, they don't respond to cpu or gpu temps which can be double that on the die. Slow the exhaust fans by half, let the intake static pressure push air to the gpu before it can move up to the exhausts low pressure. Too much exhaust up top/rear and you end up with a stream of air that's basically bypassing the gpu. Fans work by creating a low pressure area at their front and nature abhors any kind of vacuum, so air will move in the case to fill that void. Airflow is nice to have, but not when it's counter productive. That said, the card will choke itself at 83☌, so anything run under that temp is perfectly safe as far as temps go.Īgree with the above. Furmark is Not an every-day, repeat test kinda software. ![]() ![]() There have been gpus damaged by furmark, that's a fact. Even has a disclaimer stating its brutal and use at your own risk.
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