Thursday, September 15th 2016
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NVIDIA GeForce GTX 1080 Ti Specifications Leaked, Inbound for Holiday 2016?
NVIDIA is giving finishing touches to its next enthusiast-segment graphics card based on the "Pascal" architecture, the GeForce GTX 1080 Ti. Its specifications were allegedly screengrabbed by a keen-eyed enthusiast snooping around NVIDIA website, before being redacted. The specs-sheet reveals that the GTX 1080 Ti is based on the same GP102 silicon as the TITAN X Pascal, but is further cut-down from it. Given that the GTX 1080 is unflinching from its $599-$699 price-point, with some custom-design cards even being sold at over $800, the GTX 1080 Ti could either be positioned around the $850-mark, or be priced lower, disrupting currently overpriced custom GTX 1080 offerings. By pricing the TITAN X Pascal at $1200, NVIDIA appears to have given itself headroom to price the GTX 1080 Ti in a way that doesn't cannibalize premium GTX 1080 offerings.
The GTX 1080 Ti is carved out of the GP102 silicon by disabling 4 out of 30 streaming multiprocessors, resulting in 3,328 CUDA cores. The resulting TMU count is 208. The card could retain its ROP count of 96. The card will be endowed with 12 GB of GDDR5 memory across the chip's 384-bit wide memory interface, instead of GDDR5X on the TITAN X Pascal. This should yield 384 GB/s of memory bandwidth, significantly lesser than the 480 GB/s bandwidth the TITAN X Pascal enjoys, with its 10 Gbps memory chips. The GPU is clocked at 1503 MHz, with 1623 MHz GPU Boost. The card's TDP is rated at 250W, same as the TITAN X Pascal.GeForce GTX 1080 Ti Specifications:
Source:
OC3D
The GTX 1080 Ti is carved out of the GP102 silicon by disabling 4 out of 30 streaming multiprocessors, resulting in 3,328 CUDA cores. The resulting TMU count is 208. The card could retain its ROP count of 96. The card will be endowed with 12 GB of GDDR5 memory across the chip's 384-bit wide memory interface, instead of GDDR5X on the TITAN X Pascal. This should yield 384 GB/s of memory bandwidth, significantly lesser than the 480 GB/s bandwidth the TITAN X Pascal enjoys, with its 10 Gbps memory chips. The GPU is clocked at 1503 MHz, with 1623 MHz GPU Boost. The card's TDP is rated at 250W, same as the TITAN X Pascal.GeForce GTX 1080 Ti Specifications:
- 16 nm GP102 silicon
- 3,328 CUDA cores
- 208 TMUs
- 96 ROPs
- 12 GB GDDR5 memory
- 384-bit GDDR5 memory interface
- 1503 MHz core, 1623 MHz GPU Boost
- 8 GHz (GDDR5-effective) memory
- 384 GB/s memory bandwidth
- 250W TDP
176 Comments on NVIDIA GeForce GTX 1080 Ti Specifications Leaked, Inbound for Holiday 2016?
plz AMD give us Vega (and it better be decent) or else prices above will be accepted as norm and probably will see increase over that in next gen (such a ridiculous prices for gpu, that still will not be able to run 4K at 60 in fricken 2017.)
Judging by the TITAN X Pascal review on TPU, the performance gain won't be all that much either, especially as it's gonna be slower than the TXP.
bottom line?
you want a 1080? get a 1070 and OC it later ... it's sufficient for now (up to 1440p ) for me it translate into a ~400chf price reduction
you want a 1080Ti? get a 1080 and OC it later ... it's sufficient for now (up to 4k if not too hardcore on settings ... come on ... FXAA/MSAA/TXAA are not needed for it :p ) it would have been a ~200chf price reduction
you want a Titan X Pascal? think again .... or get a 1080 and OC it ... or wait the 1080Ti and OC it but the price reduction would not be really worth it ... IF ..., a big IF, the MSRP would be respected ... pfahahahaha, at MSRP that would be a ~200chf price reduction (out of MSRP : 50 to 100chf price reduction i bet ... :laugh: ) nah ... 800$ MSRP maybe ... but 1000+ price ... pfahahaha (country dependent ... ofc )
TXP are 1400-1500chf where i am (1541.17$ opposed to 1200$ ) unless nvidia store ...
When I purchased a GTX 980 a while back, I thought what a sweet card. Then the GTX 970 comes out at pretty much half the price with almost same performance and then a couple of months later a 980 Ti comes out.
This combination of released NVidia GPU's made my card pretty much obsolete overnight.
I didn't want the same issue to happen again so played it safe...
A 1080 ti has no place in the market until Vega arrives. Even then, I don't believe anyone would actually pay for a middle ground between a 1080 and a Titan X.
That being said, way to early to judge.
If this does turn out to be true, well it will still be a decent card just not as great as people had hoped.
other than that, enjoying your TXP? (i hope so ... it's still "THE beast" of the actual lineup ) aherm ... ~30% over a 1080 is already what a TXP give .... soooo ... sure?
since the TXP is not "way" ahead a 1080 ...
although the 780Ti and 980Ti did also made Titan and Titan X owner sad because they where so close, and even above in some case involving a better OC'ability, for a "fraction" of the price (not for me ... most Ti were priced like a Titan counterpart ... at my retailer/etailer nonetheless )