Wednesday, October 18th 2017
NVIDIA GTX 1070 Ti 3DMark Benchmark Results Appear Online
NVIDIA's GeForce 10 series, codenamed Pascal, has been in the market since May of 2016. NVIDIA released both the GTX 1080 and the GTX 1070 using TSMC's new manufacturing 16nm FinFet technology. When they debuted, the GTX 1070 became a popular choice among gamers initially because it was the more budget friendly option between the two. Earlier this year, NVIDIA released the GTX 1080 Ti primarily aimed at the higher-end enthusiast crowd.
We have reported about the soon-to-be launched GTX 1070 Ti before, and we also saw a render of the Gigabyte offering yesterday. Adding to the fervor today, benchmark results for the GTX 1070 Ti emerged for 3DMark Fire Strike Extreme and Time Spy on the web. Although rumored to not overclock well, the GTX 1070 Ti paints a pretty picture for those looking to upgrade their gaming rigs. According to these early leaks, the GTX 1070 Ti bests AMD's Radeon RX Vega 56 in the Time Spy benchmark in both Turbo and Balanced modes for the latter, while trading blows in Fire Strike Extreme in balanced mode and losing to it in Turbo mode. Keep in mind, these are early leaks and more are sure to come as we inch closer to its release.
Source:
VideoCardz
We have reported about the soon-to-be launched GTX 1070 Ti before, and we also saw a render of the Gigabyte offering yesterday. Adding to the fervor today, benchmark results for the GTX 1070 Ti emerged for 3DMark Fire Strike Extreme and Time Spy on the web. Although rumored to not overclock well, the GTX 1070 Ti paints a pretty picture for those looking to upgrade their gaming rigs. According to these early leaks, the GTX 1070 Ti bests AMD's Radeon RX Vega 56 in the Time Spy benchmark in both Turbo and Balanced modes for the latter, while trading blows in Fire Strike Extreme in balanced mode and losing to it in Turbo mode. Keep in mind, these are early leaks and more are sure to come as we inch closer to its release.
21 Comments on NVIDIA GTX 1070 Ti 3DMark Benchmark Results Appear Online
I guess it all comes down to pricing as usual..
But if it's priced close to 1080, I see no sense for getting a 1070 Ti.
edit: Also, I want to see gaming tests, not any synthetic crap.
Sad times
Or just buy a 1080.
its intended to slightly beat the vega 56 and cannibalize some 1080 sales at the same time.. i expect the price to be very near the 1080 price.. for things to make any sense at all it has to be..
trog
An otherwise pointless product if you ask me, but a faster card never hurt anyone.
B-Real and wait...;)
1. What will be the price? I mean, they say a 430$ MSRP, but it won't come in reference, so will the custom cards add a 40-50$ extra, getting it around 500$?
2. As you already asked, the OC capabilities. And I mean manual OC. Can they somehow disable or limit it?
Overall, if someone waited for Vega56 and haven't bought it yet, I really doubt many will choose the 1070Ti, but they will choose between a 1070 or a Vega56.
From what I've been reading from Vega owners and their cards performance , only the 1080ti beats Vega and that gap appears to be closing too.
A higher score in 3DMark is one way to look at it, but can you do 4k on one card while the other one is stuck at 1440p? Can you enable AA on one when you can't on the other? Those are things I'd worry about more.
Plus, I'm not sure what overclocking means these days. Cards will increase their frequencies when they're not running hot even when configured at stock anyway.
trog