Thursday, May 15th 2014
GIGABYTE Readies Black Edition GeForce GTX 750 Ti Card
GIGABYTE Technology will soon be releasing a new GeForce GTX 750 Ti card, a model codenamed GV-N75TWF2BK-2GI which bears the 'Black Edition' tag, meaning it has underwent a 168-hour server level stress test to ensure top-notch durability. A certificate of validation will be bundled to show the card survived testing.
Pictured below, the Black Edition GTX 750 Ti comes equipped with a WindForce 2X cooler and has 640 CUDA Cores, a 128-bit memory interface, 2 GB of GDDR5 VRAM set to 5400 MHz, dual DVI and dual (gold-plated) HDMI outputs, and a GM107 GPU with Base/Boost clocks of 1033/1111 MHz for the base model and 1163/1242 MHz for the OC edition. No word on prices yet.
Pictured below, the Black Edition GTX 750 Ti comes equipped with a WindForce 2X cooler and has 640 CUDA Cores, a 128-bit memory interface, 2 GB of GDDR5 VRAM set to 5400 MHz, dual DVI and dual (gold-plated) HDMI outputs, and a GM107 GPU with Base/Boost clocks of 1033/1111 MHz for the base model and 1163/1242 MHz for the OC edition. No word on prices yet.
10 Comments on GIGABYTE Readies Black Edition GeForce GTX 750 Ti Card
I really have to give it to GB this time. The overclocking i got with it is truely insane. While other GTX 750 TI cards got 1190-1250~ core clock, this one comes with a 1215mhz core clock and can go all the way to 1300.
GB are very genarous with their factory oc, with GTX 670 WF3 that comes pre-oc to 1175mhz, 780 Ti Ghz witch is 1085mhz and many more speedy models.
Kudos for this nice treat.
I run my 670WF3 regularly at 1315-1345mhz and have gone up to a maximum of 1397mhz. Such an amazing card still!
Gigabyte makes some really durable gfx cards, the "black edition" may be over the top. But I would gladly pay the extra $20 for that kind of reliability.
Speaking of speech, server-level stress test? LOL, this just perpetuates the myth that the word "server" has weight on it's own. Those certificates better have at least an outline of their testing methods otherwise they're more useful as tp.
These companies need to put their money where their mouths are and give their cards a 10 year warranty if they want us to believe they are using higher quality components than the competition.