Tuesday, July 12th 2022

High End NVIDIA GPU Prices on a Slippery Slope as RTX 3090 Ti Hits $1599

It seems like NVIDIA wants the market to absorb inventories of its high-end GeForce RTX 30-series SKUs, such as the RTX 3090 Ti, so the company could make room for high-end SKUs from the RTX 40-series "Ada" series. Prices of the RTX 3090 Ti have tanked to as low as $1,599 for the Founders Edition, from its launch MSRP of $1,999. This $400 price-cut is probably triggered by crypto-currency miners flooding the market with high-end RTX 30-series graphics cards at attractive prices, which gamers are all too happy to lap up. The crash in demand from miners, compounded by drop in demand from gamers buying up cards in circulation, has forced NVIDIA to renegotiate its semiconductor foundry allocation with TSMC in the short-term.
Source: VideoCardz
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109 Comments on High End NVIDIA GPU Prices on a Slippery Slope as RTX 3090 Ti Hits $1599

#101
Unregistered
UpgrayeddI only said "you" cause you said "you" first.
I leave the front door open and panel open. Last case I bought was a meshify C.
People will buy. They just pay less.
They might, but no one on TPU would buy them.

If you have to leave the panel open, then there is not enough venting on the case. I do not have to leave my front or side glass panels open and it has enough air flow through it.
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#102
Chrispy_
The 3090 Ti's premium over the 3090 was always so ridiculous that even now, at $400 off, it's still worse performance/$ than the previous record holder of worst performance/$; The insultingly-expensive 3090.

Buy a 3080. Nvidia is trolling you beyond that.
Posted on Reply
#103
Upgrayedd
TiggerThey might, but no one on TPU would buy them.

If you have to leave the panel open, then there is not enough venting on the case. I do not have to leave my front or side glass panels open and it has enough air flow through it.
We'll see I doubt it seriously
Posted on Reply
#104
Chrispy_
AnarchoPrimitivHas any actual controlled, empirical testing been conducted on former mining cards to verify that they've undergone permanent and perceivable degradation in performance? Such an experiment would be tremendously valuable to the PC DIY community. I'm personally looking to upgrade my 5700xt, probably to a 6800XT or even a 6900XT if there's a really good bargain to be had. I believe RDNA2 GPUs were not as popular as the RTX 3000 series for mining, and I'm willing to buy 2nd hand to get a good deal, but I'd like to avoid any potential issues...as anyone here ever actually used/purchased a former mining card? What was the experience?
I successfully sold all 24 of my mining cards on ebay back in March, having also posted pictures of the neat and clean rigs they were in, offered returns window of 14 days in case they weren't happy, and listed them as "mining BIOS" or "original factory BIOS". I stated the typical CPU & VRAM temperatures, the static fan speed I used for the 18 months they were mining, and the voltage/clocks of the undervolt.

I made good money, the cards were a bargain, and not one person has come back to me yet with a single question. I can't speak for all miners, but part of my assumption when buying cards for mining was to treat them well so that I didn't lose a card or waste profits on having to repad and repaste as a result of pushing them to the limits. Perhaps I could have earned 5% more ETH by doing that, but then I wouldn't have had 24 cards in great condition to sell on later...

My early mining test was the 5700XT I bought for myself and it is still working fine as a normal desktop GPU despite having been mining 24/7 for about 9 months during the pandemic. As long as they're not abused by idiots they should be fine and the constant unchanging load is very low-stress on the card indeed. All you really have to worry about is fan bearings because they'll have had a harder life than a desktop GPU which is probably turned off for 70% of the time.
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#105
HBSound
Let the price keep dropping. Make up for the overpricing of the GPUs for the last few years.
Everything has to flow with the ebbs and flows of life - everything!
Posted on Reply
#106
Nanochip
FlydommoThe last thing I'd do is to purchase a used graphics card from a miner.
Exactly. Don't reward their behavior. They (collectively) created a GPU shortage, increased prices for 2 years, and now after they used and abused their cards and crypto is in the toilet, they want to make a quick buck. No thank you, I'd rather use Intel UHD graphics than to buy a card from a miner. And no way I'm going to use Intel UHD graphics.
Posted on Reply
#108
Ruru
S.T.A.R.S.
For once those price drops are true even in Finland, hell, the cheapest 3090 Ti is cheaper than the cheapest 3090.
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