Thursday, March 7th 2013
ASUS Readies Size-Optimized GeForce GTX 670 DirectCU Mini for Mini-ITX Builds
ASUS is working on the GeForce GTX 670 DirectCU Mini, a high-end graphics card that's size-optimized for mini-ITX gaming PC builds. NVIDIA's reference-design PCB for the GTX 670 already established that compact (<20 cm long) PCBs are very much possible for the chip. ASUS designed its own short (17 cm long) PCB with a 5-phase VRM, which draws power from a single 8-pin PCIe power connector, instead of two 6-pin. This allows you to make do with compact PSUs that only feature one PCIe connector, and avoid wasting Molex cables on the second 6-pin.
What's more interesting about the GTX 670 DirectCU Mini is its cooler, which appears to use a combination of a thick metal plate that draws heat from VRM and memory on the obverse side; and a round aluminum fin-stack, which could be cooled by a single ~80 mm fan. ASUS did not release pricing or availability information, and is still gauging community interest in such a product.
What's more interesting about the GTX 670 DirectCU Mini is its cooler, which appears to use a combination of a thick metal plate that draws heat from VRM and memory on the obverse side; and a round aluminum fin-stack, which could be cooled by a single ~80 mm fan. ASUS did not release pricing or availability information, and is still gauging community interest in such a product.
28 Comments on ASUS Readies Size-Optimized GeForce GTX 670 DirectCU Mini for Mini-ITX Builds
This thing alog with a mini-ITX i7 would make for a nearly silent and killer HTPC!
Ms Lian Li "Hurry up I dont have all night. Put it in my slot already."
Mr Kepler (looking dejected) "It is"
oh god, its waaaaaayyyy too late
www.techpowerup.com/167657/ZOTAC-GeForce-GTX-670-TwinCooler-Graphics-Card-Detailed.html
But that screaming ~80 mm fan kinda ruined it...
See....there are people who are not too smart and tend to believe bigger is better.
Personally I do not believe nVidia needed to use that big cooler on the 670 and could have very easily made a cooler which stayed within the length of the PCB.
I know it performs like a $400 card but it's not big enough to be $400. :rolleyes: