Here you are, the NVIDIA GeForce GTX 560 Ti. Making use of NVIDIA's proven second generation Fermi architecture, this GPU targets a key price point which has been NVIDIA and ATI's hunting ground since 2006. The sub-$300 segment is where customers have learned to expect high-end like performance and features at compelling prices. Price-performance ratio is the king here. The performance-price sweet spot is a virtual G-spot for GPU manufacturers. Whoever hits it right, gets loads of...sales. Veterans in this segment include the GeForce 7900 GT, Radeon X1950 Pro, GeForce 8800 GT, Radeon HD 4850, GeForce GTX 260-216, GeForce GTX 460, Radeon HD 6870, and in comes the latest contender, the GTX 560 Ti. The model name invokes some nostalgia as SKUs carrying the "Ti" marker were some of NVIDIA's first with programmable shaders. While the GTX 560 Ti isn't a "first" in anything as far as feature-set goes, I think "Ti" has more to do with shaping up the brand, telling buyers that the product has a little more to offer for its price, and that it's a step above the price point GTX 460 set for itself, while remaining to be a performance segment model.
Getting into the fine print of NVIDIA's offer, the GeForce GTX 560 Ti is based on NVIDIA's new GF114 chip. As far as specifications and transistor-count go, it is identical to the GF104 on which GTX 460 was based, except that it has all 384 of the CUDA cores physically present enabled, and that it uses the same secret-sauce (read: electrical enhancements) that made GF110, an evolved clone of the GF100, totally rock with power consumption figures. 384 CUDA cores apart, there's a 256-bit wide GDDR5 memory interface, 32 ROPs, branched geometry processing, and the immediate fruition of the electrical enhancements, clock speeds: 822 MHz core, 1640 MHz CUDA cores, and 1000 MHz (4.00 GHz effective) memory. As far as features go, the GTX 560 Ti doesn't come with anything we haven't seen already with the GTX 460, it's all about performance per watt/dollar in this round.
GeForce GTX 460
GeForce GTX 460
Radeon HD 6850
Radeon HD 5850
GeForce GTX 470
Radeon HD 6870
GeForce GTX 560 Ti
Palit GTX 560 Ti
Radeon HD 5870
GeForce GTX 570
GeForce GTX 480
GeForce GTX 580
Radeon HD 5970
Shader units
336
336
960
1440
448
1120
384
384
1600
480
480
512
2x 1600
ROPs
24
32
32
32
40
32
32
32
32
40
48
48
2x 32
GPU
GF104
GF104
Barts
Cypress
GF100
Barts
GF114
GF114
Cypress
GF110
GF100
GF110
2x Cypress
Transistors
1950M
1950M
1700M
2154M
3200M
1700M
1950M
1950M
2154M
3000M
3200M
3000M
2x 2154M
Memory Size
768 MB
1024 MB
1024 MB
1024 MB
1280 MB
1024 MB
1024 MB
1024 MB
1024 MB
1280 MB
1536 MB
1536 MB
2x 1024 MB
Memory Bus Width
192 bit
256 bit
256 bit
256 bit
320 bit
256 bit
256 bit
256 bit
256 bit
320 bit
384 bit
384 bit
2x 256 bit
Core Clock
675 MHz
675 MHz
775 MHz
725 MHz
607 MHz
900 MHz
823 MHz
900 MHz
850 MHz
732 MHz
700 MHz
772 MHz
725 MHz
Memory Clock
900 MHz
900 MHz
1000 MHz
1000 MHz
837 MHz
1050 MHz
1002 MHz
1050 MHz
1200 MHz
950 MHz
924 MHz
1002 MHz
1000 MHz
Price
$160
$200
$180
$260
$260
$240
$250
$269
$360
$330
$450
$500
$580
Packaging
Palit's package follows the company's typical box design. The "Sonic" sticker on the right, identifying the SKU as overclocked, is a bit hard to see - I almost missed it.
Contents
You will receive:
Graphics card
Driver CD + Documentation
PCI-Express power cable
The Card
Palit is using a large heatsink with two fans on it and a custom PCB design.
GeForce GTX 560 requires two slots in your system.
The card has two DVI ports, one analog port and one HDMI port. Unlike AMD's latest GPUs, the output logic design is not as flexible. On AMD cards vendors are free to combine six TMDS links into any output configuration they want (dual-link DVI consuming two links), on NVIDIA, you are fixed to two DVI outputs and one HDMI/DP in addition to that. NVIDIA confirmed that you can use only two displays at the same time, so for a three monitor setup you would need two cards.
NVIDIA has included an HDMI sound device inside their GPU which does away with the requirement of connecting an external audio source to the card for HDMI audio. The HDMI interface is HDMI 1.3a compatible which includes Dolby TrueHD, DTS-HD, AC-3, DTS and up to 7.1 channel audio with 192 kHz / 24-bit. NVIDIA also claims full support for the 3D portion of the HDMI 1.4 specification which will become important later this year when we will see first Blu-Ray titles shipping with support for 3D output.
You may combine up to two GeForce GTX 560 cards in SLI for increased performance or improved image quality settings.
Here are the front and the back of the card, high-res versions are also available (front, back). If you choose to use these images for voltmods etc, please include a link back to this site or let us post your article.