Thursday, July 7th 2016
NVIDIA Announces the GeForce GTX 1060, 6 GB GDDR5, $249
NVIDIA today announced its third desktop consumer graphics card based on the "Pascal" architecture, the GeForce GTX 1060. NVIDIA aims to strike a price-performance sweetspot, by pricing this card aggressively at US $249 (MSRP), with its reference "Founders Edition" variant priced at $299. To make sure two of these cards at $500 don't cannibalize the $599-699 GTX 1080, NVIDIA didn't even give this card 2-way SLI support. Retail availability of the cards will commence from 19th July, 2016. NVIDIA claims that the GTX 1060 performs on-par with the GeForce GTX 980 from the previous generation.
The GeForce GTX 1060 is based on the new 16 nm "GP106" silicon, the company's third ASIC based on this architecture after GP100 and GP104. It features 1,280 CUDA cores spread across ten streaming multiprocessors, 80 TMUs, 48 ROPs, and a 192-bit wide GDDR5 memory interface, holding 6 GB of memory. The card draws power from a single 6-pin PCIe power connector, as the GPU's TDP is rated at just 120W. The core is clocked up to 1.70 GHz, and the memory at 8 Gbps, at which it belts out 192 GB/s of memory bandwidth. Display outputs include three DisplayPorts 1.4, one HDMI 2.0b, and a DVI.
The GeForce GTX 1060 is based on the new 16 nm "GP106" silicon, the company's third ASIC based on this architecture after GP100 and GP104. It features 1,280 CUDA cores spread across ten streaming multiprocessors, 80 TMUs, 48 ROPs, and a 192-bit wide GDDR5 memory interface, holding 6 GB of memory. The card draws power from a single 6-pin PCIe power connector, as the GPU's TDP is rated at just 120W. The core is clocked up to 1.70 GHz, and the memory at 8 Gbps, at which it belts out 192 GB/s of memory bandwidth. Display outputs include three DisplayPorts 1.4, one HDMI 2.0b, and a DVI.
182 Comments on NVIDIA Announces the GeForce GTX 1060, 6 GB GDDR5, $249
Whatever the performance, NVIDIA handed AMD a win with the 480 in this segment. I can't say I'm surprised.
with that price point, I dont see any advantage over RX 480 beside 8-10% performance increase
which can be achieve easily with RX 480 3rd party custom card, to top off that Nvidia disabled SLI for this card
to avoid cannibalize GTX 1080 card
Anyway, when does the reviews NDA expire?
Edit: Nvm, it seems the NDA expires on the same day this is available (July 19). Damn it...
In stores its actually 320 euro for me.
This thing at 300 dollars...guess that means it will be about 400+ euro for me...
and that for something that is about GTX980 performance.....nope sorry, that is just way too much.
Why TPU doesn't post about 1070/80 not working with VR headsets? Gotta keep those 'cookies' coming in i guess...
;)
You absolutely know that because Nvidia has hit high frequencies now, they'll be in trouble next year. :rolleyes:
I will buy it early 2017. Price should be normal by then. I won't be using this for gaming. I just need CUDA cores.
Card without the cooler, it seems that if you take the cooler off, you take the power connector off as well.
- Better performance
- Better performance per dollar
- Better efficiency
- Lower power draw
- Possibly higher overclocking headroom.
Which sane person would prefer an RX 480?
Either the prices are high, or people just see the lack of SLI and go mental regardless.