- Joined
- Dec 18, 2005
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- 8,253 (1.19/day)
System Name | money pit.. |
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Processor | Intel 9900K 4.8 at 1.152 core voltage minus 0.120 offset |
Motherboard | Asus rog Strix Z370-F Gaming |
Cooling | Dark Rock TF air cooler.. Stock vga air coolers with case side fans to help cooling.. |
Memory | 32 gb corsair vengeance 3200 |
Video Card(s) | Palit Gaming Pro OC 2080TI |
Storage | 150 nvme boot drive partition.. 1T Sandisk sata.. 1T Transend sata.. 1T 970 evo nvme m 2.. |
Display(s) | 27" Asus PG279Q ROG Swift 165Hrz Nvidia G-Sync, IPS.. 2560x1440.. |
Case | Gigabyte mid-tower.. cheap and nothing special.. |
Audio Device(s) | onboard sounds with stereo amp.. |
Power Supply | EVGA 850 watt.. |
Mouse | Logitech G700s |
Keyboard | Logitech K270 |
Software | Win 10 pro.. |
Benchmark Scores | Firestike 29500.. timepsy 14000.. |
One, no one batch will ever have a perfect yield that is why 1070s or any lower tier sku exist in the first place to recapture the failed dies, so your initial statement is false. No one knows when Nvidia started harvesting chips for a 1070ti it's highly unlikely they have just started recently, and more plausible they've passively collecting dies well in advance for this SKU. Once initial demand for 1070s settled they only needed to use the worst useable dies to meet demand and then portion out and set aside the rest for other uses(e.g. super oc editions or other variants). Disabling dies is usually a last resort.
market demand is one thing.. yields are another.. yields improve.. market demands if the prices are about right stay the same.. crippling good chips to match demand is the norm.. it has been for a number of years.. binning is just the cover up story.. he he
trog
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