Jul 11, 2011 10:11 GMT  ·  By

Point of View and TGT have just announced the introduction of two new custom graphics cards based on Nvidia's GTX 570 core that include 2.5GB of video buffer and sport factory overclocked operating frequencies.

Both of these solutions use an in-house designed cooling assembly, which relies on four rather thick copper heatpipes to draw the heat away from the GPU and into an aluminum heatsink that spans most of the card.

This is then cooled by two high-diameter fans, and POV/TGT claims that this solution is able to keep the temperatures of the cards in check without increasing the noise generated by the system.

The more powerful of the two models is the GeForce GTX 570 2.5GB UltraCharged which has the GTX 570 core clocked at 810MHz, while the memory operates at 990MHz (3960MHz effective).

Its smaller brother, the GeForce GTX 570 2.5GB Charged, is a bit slower than the UltraCharged version as the GPU works at 772MHz, while the memory runs at 950MHz (3800MHz data rate).

As mentioned previously, the two POV/TGT graphics cards feature 2.5GB of video buffer memory, which should help them perform better when running multi-monitor setups at high resolutions or in games that feature high-quality textures such as Metro 2033 or Shogun 2.

No information regarding the release date, or the pricing, of these two GTX 570 solutions is available at this time.

The GeForce GTX 570 is based on Nvidia's GF110 GPU and it packs 480 stream processors, 60 texture units, 40 ROP units and a 320-bit wide memory bus that is usually connected to 1.25GB of GDDR5 video buffer.

Nvidia's default operating frequencies are rated at 732MHz for the GPU and 950MHz (3800MHz data rate) for the memory. (via Fudzilla)