antihelten
Golden Member
- Feb 2, 2012
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None with any stock.
The 650 one Head1985 linked wasn't in stock either, so I don't think he is worried about that.
None with any stock.
Quick comparison:
- Geforce GTX 1070: 70.2% single precision processing power of Geforce GTX 1080
- Geforce GTX 1070 offers 83.3% Geforce GTX 1080 performance at 1440P
- Geforce GTX 1070: sold at 63.2% / 64.2% the price of Geforce GTX 1080 (custom / FE)
970 is 75.8% TFLOPs and 87% performance of 980 at launch:
https://tpucdn.com/reviews/NVIDIA/GeForce_GTX_980/images/perfrel_2560.gif
Seems similar ratio, although overall slower of course.
Quick comparison:
- Geforce GTX 1070: 70.2% single precision processing power of Geforce GTX 1080
- Geforce GTX 1070 offers 83.3% Geforce GTX 1080 performance at 1440P
- Geforce GTX 1070: sold at 63.2% / 64.2% the price of Geforce GTX 1080 (custom / FE)
970 is 75.8% TFLOPs and 87% performance of 980 at launch:
https://tpucdn.com/reviews/NVIDIA/GeForce_GTX_980/images/perfrel_2560.gif
Seems similar ratio, although overall slower of course.
Frametime results tell us a lot about single and multi-GPU setups in the way they interact in framerate, latency and anomalies. You will, however, see less issues on a single GPU setup (obviously). But hey, if there is a problem, rest assured it would be exposed. Comparing apples to oranges, when you look at the charts NVIDIA still has a better overall solution as their latency differentials for each even and odd frame are a hint better. But the difference with AMD is very close, albeit we did see more glitches (as small as they are really) on the Fury. Overall we can say that both the GeForce GTX 1070 and 1080 performed exemplary in the ten FCAT tests we ran it through. Three out of ten tests were DirectX 12 enabled. The end-score is a whopping 10 out 10, all games passed our examination easily without any noticeable stutters or anomalies, and that is pretty terrific if you ask me. The massive 8 GB frame-buffer on ther GTX 1070 obviously helps out quite a bit in the more AA heavy environments, but much like the GeForce GTX 1080 does, the 1070 manages just as well. Which makes total sense considering they are nearly identical GPUs.
What's the difference is this their regular vanilla model? With that price I think we should see AIB models of the same price soon or less in a month.
What's the difference is this their regular vanilla model? With that price I think we should see AIB models of the same price soon or less in a month.
This gives me time to get a i7 6700 K in my rig along with new ram.
I could only get 4.2 which what it runs at now on this 2500k and I've had it stock since I bought it. Anything higher it would fail tests or completely freeze the PC. Gotta say though it's been excellent all these years.I'm right behind you....I'm gonna overclock this cpu till I blows up first.
I'm sure I can get 4.6 out of her .
I would love to see a Gigabyte G1 gtx1070. I believe these cards will boost to 2000 MHz and overclock higher.
I hope Dell Sells these cards. I have a 25% off coupon that I'm itching to use and it's the only thing of value that I'm looking to buy soon.
I do have a 10% Dell coupon I was mailed after buying my laptop. Wonder if it's still good.Well, they have a PNY 1080FE...
Seems like you could make a profit?