Of those, only two stick to the reference GPU frequencies

Nov 9, 2013 07:28 GMT  ·  By

Unlike others of NVIDIA's OEMs who released just the reference card with a sticker on top, EVGA put together a full lineup of GeForce GTX 780 Ti graphics adapters, with six different members.

Two of the newcomers retain the reference cooler from NVIDIA, but one of them pushes the GK110 GPU from 876 MHz / 928 MHz to 980 MHz / 1046 MHz (Base/Boost). That's actually kind of remarkable.

But these are just two out of six cards, and the others definitely don't slack, although we can't really say for sure what two of them can do, or rather will be able to do.

We're referring to the GTX 780 Ti Dual Classified with EVGA ACX Cooler, and the GTX 780 Ti Dual Classified with EVGA Hydro Copper Watercooler.

These two haven't had their GPU clocks announced, and their memory frequencies haven't been announced either.

Interestingly enough, the former of these two has the same cooler as the only custom-cooled card to feature reference clocks: GTX 780 Ti with EVGA ACX Cooler.

Curiously though, this one has the 3 GB of GDDR5 VRAM working at 7010 MHz instead of 7000 for some reason.

That leaves the GTX 780 Ti Superclocked with EVGA ACX Cooler, whose base GPU clock is of 1006 MHz and GPU Boost setting is 1072 MHz. The memory is left at 7000 MHz though.

All of EVGA's new cards come with PhysX and TXAA technologies, GeForce ShadowPlay support (software integrated in Geforce Experience, records your gameplay sessions and/or streams them online to others).

As for those who want a rundown of the specs, here they are: 2,880 CUDA cores, 3GB GDDR5 VRAM, 384-bit interface, 240 TMUs (texture mapping units), 48 ROPs (raster operating units) and four video outputs (dual-DVI, HDMI and DisplayPort).

The EVGA GeForce GTX 780 Ti graphics cards are priced from $699 / €699 upwards.

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EVGA GTX 780 Ti
GTX 780 Ti Dual Classified with EVGA ACX CoolerGTX 780 Ti Dual Classified with EVGA Hydro Copper Watercooler
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