Monday, October 6th 2014
MSI Announces GeForce GTX 970 Gaming LE
MSI announced a variant of its GeForce GTX 970 Gaming OC graphics card, which goes easy on the factory-overclock, dubbed LE (lite edition). The card is identical in design to the GTX 970 Gaming OC, which launched last month, but features clock speeds of 1076 MHz core, 1216 MHz GPU Boost in OC mode, and 1064 MHz core with 1203 MHz GPU Boost, in "Gaming" mode; and NVIDIA-reference speeds of 1051 MHz core and 1178 MHz GPU Boost, in silent mode. The card is still based on a custom-design PCB that features a strong VRM, which draws power from a combination of 8-pin and 6-pin PCIe power connectors; and the company's new TwinFrozr V cooling solution. MSI didn't announce pricing.
11 Comments on MSI Announces GeForce GTX 970 Gaming LE
But I am still waiting for info on the GTX 960, and then I will decide what to get.
Step 2 - Flash MSI 970 Gaming Edition firmware onto LE card
Step 3 - Enjoy
Step 5 - Realise you forgot to backup despite everyone telling you to
Step 6 - Come on TPU asking "HALP CARD IS POTATO" and receive comments on how flashing GPUs is a stupid idea.
Chances are that these cards are ones that couldn't make the grade at the higher clocks anyway, so I don't think you'll get much luck flashing them to 'full fat' versions.
You’re in denial believing MSI would provide the same potential, and especially this early in the release.
MSI knows the limit of such chips and subsequently, knows their value. Is there perhaps a slight more OC sure, but at a cost of diminishing efficiency, and why they’d rather not open then up to reviews.. For those who are more interested in it as a plug and play being $10-15 above the MSRP feels wonderful. I really see it as a card (reference) but honestly a more cost effective cooler than delivering an reference SKU. MSI forgo's the need/cost of worrying about production fixtures, part inventory of the materials for reference PCB/coolers, packaging, and just offer this. MSI saves mucho-bucks and they still sell it for more than $330.
How many chips are they producing currently, so the availability is so poor?