- Joined
- Sep 7, 2011
- Messages
- 2,785 (0.58/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. |
The other alternative is to re-release the Titan with the two missing power phases as some vendors have done with the reference PCB for their own GTX 780's.The Titan can barely survive on its own VRMs at stock none the less trying to suck out 10-15% more performance out of it on air for the masses. If I was NVIDIA or a board partner, I wouldn't release a Titan with much more than it has already for fear of inordinately high RMA rates potentially dramatically cutting into profits.
Reducing the VRAM from 6GB to 3GB, and neutering the FP64 capability could serve to provide a differentiator between the two models.
There are a lot of permutations possible. Likely depends on AMD's final pricing of the 290X and 290, how long it would take to put into action, and whether Nvidia see the effort viable versus the lifespan of the cards and sales potential. Allowing AIB's to raise voltage limits on cards built to handle the increased power (the 8+2, 12+2, 16+2 configs) helps Nvidia and AIB's but there still needs to be a reference card if Nvidia want widespread and continuing site review benchmark PR