Dec 8, 2010 07:27 GMT  ·  By

Since we haven't really been able to contain the entire flood of announcements regarding the GeForce GTX 570 that followed NVIDIA's official unveiling of the second 500 series card, we continue our coverage today, starting with Point of View, who's released no less than three GTX 570 models onto the market, two of which provide various degrees of factory overclocking. So, beside the basic GeForce GTX 570 graphics card configuration, which, as you'll see a bit later on, adheres closely to the reference design, POV has also rolled out two TGT/POV Overclocked variants, namely the POV GeForce GTX570 Charged and Ultra Charged.

So, starting from the bottom, we've got the standard version, whose GPU runs at 732 MHz and uses 1280 MB’s ultrafast GDDR5 memory (running at 3800 Mhz), accompanied by 480 shader cores with an individual shader clock of 1464 MHz.

Furthermore, the card packs a 320-bit memory bus, 2x dual link DVI interfaces, as well as one mini-HDMI interface, for outing content to a Full HD display, while also providing support for the huge array of NVIDIA technologies Fermi cards bring along, such as 3D Vision, 3D Vision Surround, CUDA, Blu-ray playback support etc.

Next in line comes the POV/TGT GeForce GTX 570 Charged mode, whose core clock has been pushed up to 772 Mhz, while the memory clock reaches 3888 Mhz and the shader clock 1544 Mhz.

Nevertheless, the true overclocked monster is the POV/TGT GeForce GTX 570 Ultra Charged, that boasts a core clock of 810 Mhz, a memory clock of 3960 Mhz and a shader clock of 1620 Mhz.

All of the three new GTX 570 cards from Point of View will hit the shelves in the immediate future, pricing being set at 316, 377 and 406 Euro respectively, for the standard, Charged and Ultra Charged versions.