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An unusual MSI RTX 3080 Ti SUPRIM X graphics card is up for sale, second hand, on Facebook Marketplace—the Sydney, Australia-based seller is advertising this component as a truly custom model with a non-standard allocation of VRAM: "Yes this is 20 GB not 12 GB." The used item is said to be in "good condition" with its product description elaborating on a bit of history: "There are some scuff marks from the previous owner, but the card works fine. It is an extremely rare collector's item, due to NVIDIA cancelling these variants a month before release. This is not an engineering sample card—this was a finished OEM product that got cancelled, unfortunately." The seller is seeking AU$1100 (~$740 USD), after a reduction from the original asking price of AU$1,300 (~$870 USD).
MSI and Gigabyte were reportedly on the verge of launching GeForce RTX 3080 Ti 20 GB variants two years ago, but NVIDIA had a change of heart (probably due to concerns about costs and production volumes) and decided to stick with a public release of the standard 12 GB GPU. Affected AIBs chose to not destroy their stock of 20 GB cards—these were instead sold to crypto miners and shady retailers. Wccftech points out that mining-oriented units have identifying marks on their I/O ports.
The seller included a higher-res screengrab of their desktop—showing a score of 21.9K points in TimeSpy (3D Mark) benchmarks, various details exhibited by TechPowerUp GPU-Z v2.53.0, and some tweaks made through MSI Afterburner:
The up-for-sale card (based on Ampere GA102) has 10,496 CUDA cores and 20 GB of GDDR6 memory with a 320-bit bus, clocked at 1188 MHz. NVIDIA does not offer official drivers for this variant—some custom software modding is in play here. In theory this MSI RTX 3080 Ti SUPRIM X 20 GB model could perform at a higher level with proper first party support.
View at TechPowerUp Main Site | Source
MSI and Gigabyte were reportedly on the verge of launching GeForce RTX 3080 Ti 20 GB variants two years ago, but NVIDIA had a change of heart (probably due to concerns about costs and production volumes) and decided to stick with a public release of the standard 12 GB GPU. Affected AIBs chose to not destroy their stock of 20 GB cards—these were instead sold to crypto miners and shady retailers. Wccftech points out that mining-oriented units have identifying marks on their I/O ports.
The seller included a higher-res screengrab of their desktop—showing a score of 21.9K points in TimeSpy (3D Mark) benchmarks, various details exhibited by TechPowerUp GPU-Z v2.53.0, and some tweaks made through MSI Afterburner:
The up-for-sale card (based on Ampere GA102) has 10,496 CUDA cores and 20 GB of GDDR6 memory with a 320-bit bus, clocked at 1188 MHz. NVIDIA does not offer official drivers for this variant—some custom software modding is in play here. In theory this MSI RTX 3080 Ti SUPRIM X 20 GB model could perform at a higher level with proper first party support.
View at TechPowerUp Main Site | Source