Jan 26, 2011 07:52 GMT  ·  By

After NVIDIA finally decided to go official with its mainstream-oriented GeForce GTX 560 Ti, all of the company's partners have also started rolling out their various implementations of this graphics card, including here Inno3D, who's just outed their GeForce GTX 560 Ti OC model. The card from Inno3D sports 384 CUDA cores, 880 Mhz graphics clock and 1644 Mhz processor clock, which doesn't rate it way above the standard configuration.

Things aren't much different in terms of memory, the GeForce GTX 560 Ti OC from Inno3D also sporting 1024MB of GDDR5 memory, with a 256-bit interface and running at 4100MHz, while also featuring a 128 GB/sec Memory Bandwidth.

As mentioned before, these values are fairly close to those of the reference card, which means that there's plenty of overclocking headroom left for those enthusiast users who wish to push the GPU beyond its limits.

Moreover, the board also packs the standard connectivity options we've come to expect from this GPU series, namely dual DVI and HDMI video output interfaces.

Similar to all of the other GeForce GTX 560 Ti cards released these days, Inno3D's model also delivers full support for the NIVIDIA CUDA technology, designed for accelerating the most demanding system tasks, as well as for the PhysX technology.

Moreover, the GPU offers the necessary support for NVIDIA 3D Vision, bringing a fully immersive stereoscopic 3D experience to the PC, plus 3D Vision Surround, for enabling a comprehensive 3D effect on no less than three displays, as well as NVIDIA SLI technology, for adding more than one graphics card to a gaming system.

The Inno3D GTX 560 Ti OC is available in Europe for around 199 pounds sterling, which translates into roughly 300 US dollars, but it's likely that pricing will adjust and differ, depending on the specific local market.