Tuesday, May 16th 2017
EVGA Introduces the GeForce GT 1030
Accelerate your entire PC experience with the fast and powerful EVGA GeForce GT 1030 graphics card. Its award-winning NVIDIA Pascal architecture, powerful graphics engine, and state-of-the-art technologies give you the performance upgrade you need to drive today's most demanding PC applications.
Unleash your creativity with stunning HD video and picture editing and enjoy incredible gaming. Now, you can do it all 2X faster than with Intel Core i5 integrated graphics.* You can even get easy driver updates and one-click game optimization with GeForce Experience.Key Features:
**On select SKU's only
Learn more at www.evga.com/articles/01108/evga-geforce-gt-1030/
Unleash your creativity with stunning HD video and picture editing and enjoy incredible gaming. Now, you can do it all 2X faster than with Intel Core i5 integrated graphics.* You can even get easy driver updates and one-click game optimization with GeForce Experience.Key Features:
- 2X faster game performance than an Intel Core i5 integrated graphics.*
- Includes low profile bracket.**
- Single slot efficiency.**
- Passive. Cool. Silent.**
**On select SKU's only
Learn more at www.evga.com/articles/01108/evga-geforce-gt-1030/
33 Comments on EVGA Introduces the GeForce GT 1030
Besides, who doesn't love cards designed to compete with integrated graphics cards?
I mean, right guys?
Additionally, I feel like a single-slot passively-cooled version should be possible, considering GT 1030 TDP is a mere 30W.
Had one card, that was hitting 90C on open stand. Total pain in the ass w/ hemorrhoids and stuff. Couldn't find the article, but I've read that PCI-e x1 devices can negotiate power draw up to 25W. 6W on 12V rail is the base "safe" limit.
There were both PCIe x4 and x1 GT730 cards based on GK208 chips (Only x4 in retail, and x1 was a Zotac OEM variant exclusive to some Dell workstations).
I've only seen those once in the local refurb server parts store. Nice little card.
read.pudn.com/downloads166/ebook/758109/PCI_Express_CEM_1.1.pdf
There are a lot of buts in the 25W initalisation... that's usually for server cards... and full height, not low profile. Seconds, I don't trust mainstream entry motherboards meeting the power requirencments for pcie x1, simply they lack copper. That's more to be on the safe side... and even USB addin cards use additional molex/sata ports for needed current, with a few exceptions that reside DC-DC converters onboard and two USB ports only, a proper TYPE-C charging device could fry the sucker thou.
translate.google.com/translate?depth=1&hl=en&prev=search&rurl=translate.google.co.in&sl=zh-CN&sp=nmt4&u=http://www.expreview.com/54182-7.html
If I wait long enough for a decent Mini-ITX AM4 board to build my Ryzen powered HTPC/media server, then I will absolutely need a card exactly like this.
1030 is decent, but only if you are absolutely broke. But, the manufacturers still do it.
What makes it even more confusing, is 25W limitation for HHFL cards. According to spec they should be limited to 25W max, and be limited to 167mm in length, but over the past 5-6 years we had a range of devices with 28-70W power constraints and length varying from 165 to 180mm.
...a-a-a-and few minutes later I found a possible loophole:roll: If you make it 69mm wide - it qualifies as a full-height card according to spec and can use moar powa-a-a-a-a.
But for the sake of marketing, we are gonna call it LP.
www.msi.com/Graphics-card/GeForce-GTX-1050-Ti-4GT-LP.html#hero-specification
Though, there are some cards that are actually 68.9mm wide.... :shadedshu:
It makes my brain hurt.... This is more confusing than reading haiku without translation :banghead:
You, guys, with your stereotypes and rusty imagination... :nutkick: