1070
Idle temperatures are excellent, which is no wonder since the fans don't stop in idle. During gaming, the card goes above
82°C, which results in lower clocks due to Boost 3.0.
1070
Idle temperatures are excellent, which is no wonder since the fans don't stop in idle. During gaming, the card goes above
82°C, which results in lower clocks due to Boost 3.0.
980 Ti
Idle temperatures are fine; idle-fan-off would have certainly been possible.
Under load, the card reaches its thermal limit of 84°C after a minute of gaming or so, which will cause it to lower Boost clocks, and, as such, performance.
980
Temperatures are good, but they are capped by NVIDIA's Boost 2.0 algorithm which is set to a
80°C temperature limit. Clocks will be reduced slightly if the card gets any hotter than that, although they will never drop below the base clock. Our graph further down on the page details this card's clock distribution.
Temperatures are quite good. A
fter seeing numbers in the high 90°s during recent AMD reviews, the 83°C we see from GTX 780 Ti feels almost cool. It's good to see
NVIDIA bump their 80°C temperature target, which I felt was a bit too low, up to 82°C.
Temperatures are good in both idle and load. NVIDIA's new Boost 2.0 algorithm is tuned for an operating temperature of 80°C, which is a good balance between noise and heat.
Nvidias stock GPU can't even able to hold the maximum clock ... what is the point to OC something if maximum gpu clock already drops.