- Joined
- Sep 7, 2011
- Messages
- 2,785 (0.57/day)
- Location
- New Zealand
System Name | MoneySink |
---|---|
Processor | 2600K @ 4.8 |
Motherboard | P8Z77-V |
Cooling | AC NexXxos XT45 360, RayStorm, D5T+XSPC tank, Tygon R-3603, Bitspower |
Memory | 16GB Crucial Ballistix DDR3-1600C8 |
Video Card(s) | GTX 780 SLI (EVGA SC ACX + Giga GHz Ed.) |
Storage | Kingston HyperX SSD (128) OS, WD RE4 (1TB), RE2 (1TB), Cav. Black (2 x 500GB), Red (4TB) |
Display(s) | Achieva Shimian QH270-IPSMS (2560x1440) S-IPS |
Case | NZXT Switch 810 |
Audio Device(s) | onboard Realtek yawn edition |
Power Supply | Seasonic X-1050 |
Software | Win8.1 Pro |
Benchmark Scores | 3.5 litres of Pale Ale in 18 minutes. |
I think the difference is that previous 8GB cards are "upgrades" over existing 4GB cards. The underlying architecture wasn't strong enough to utilize 8GB (Most comparisons between 4GB and 8GB only showed difference when the 4GB framebuffer was saturated with HD textures. Less a win for 8GB than a loss for 4GB). When the "cons" were voiced, the instances when 8GB made a tangible difference much more fewer and further between .The GTX 1080 is only available as an 8GB card. No other option exists.Great review but, I do find it funny that when AMD releases a GPU with 8GB of VRAM and it gets a Con for "8 GB VRAM provides no tangible benefits" but, when nVidia does it, suddenly it's not a con anymore
Not actually true. Via Nvidia via Kyle Bennett:I think a EVGA engineer confirmed that 1080 only supports 2-way SLI?
Catering for the HWBot crowd.While NVIDIA no longer recommends 3 or 4 way systems for SLI, we know that true enthusiasts will not be swayed…and in fact some games will continue to deliver great scaling beyond two GPUs. For this class of user we have developed an Enthusiast Key that can be downloaded off of NVIDIA’s website and loaded into an individual’s GPU.
Because some vendors see the value of selling reduced BoM cards for those consumers who value savings over bling. Sapphire did it for years with their Flex cards.also, "founders edition" +100$ = 699 and AIB will table on a 599$ MSRP my @$$, AIB will never price their custom lower than a reference and since the founders IS the reference model they will table on a base price of 699$, why would they do otherwise?
I'm pretty sure the high volume sellers will be more than happy to sell at $599. Care to make a wager that they won't? Palit/Galax have already shown a reduced BoM GTX 1080 using a recycled reduced BoM GTX 980 / GTX 980 Ti HSF shroud.
That'swhy they recycle previous cooling solutions and plonk them on top of the reference PCB. The largest graphics AIB's also act as full manufacturers for not just their own house brands (i.e. Palit with GALAX and Gainward), but AIB's that have no manufacturing base (i.e. the aforementioned Palit building cards for PNY). ODM's like Asus, EVGA, and Gigabyte probably wont bother selling at the low end of the 1080 market, but it has already been shown that the really large OEMs selling huge volumes of cards are quite eager to sell at every price point to maximize opportunity and keep the manufacturing and assembly lines fully occupied.Except the reference 1080 is $699 and the partners most likely won't undercut that by much, if at all.
To be realistic it wouldn't make sense for partners to put money in to new designs and sell cheaper.
Only makes sense if the GPU tier is the same. GP104 is a second tier GPU, the R9 380 is a third tier GPU.Then compare it to R9 380.
After all, it also ends with 80.
Makes as much sense.
Comparison should be by GPU tier, not numbers. GM204 is a second tier GPU of the Maxwell architecture, GP104 is a second tier GPU of the Pascal architecture.