Jan 31, 2011 10:46 GMT  ·  By
AVADirect's systems welcome the arrival of Nvidia's GTX 560 Ti graphics cards
   AVADirect's systems welcome the arrival of Nvidia's GTX 560 Ti graphics cards

Launched less than a week ago, the GTX 560 Ti managed to make its way into many of the custom gaming PCs available on the market, AVADirect just announcing they now offer a wide variety of graphics cards based on the GF114 core, both as standalone computer parts and as an option for their custom gaming desktops.

The boutique manufacturer now retails GTX 560 Ti graphics cards from no less than five different manufacturers, including names like Asus, EVGA, Gigabyte, MSI or Zotac.

The cards are also available in a wide series of AVADirect custom built gaming systems, including the company's small form factor and full size PC lines.

The most powerful of these is a dual socket gaming systems/workstation that pairs dual Xeon 5600 or 5500 LGA 1366 processors (up to six computing cores each) with up to 48GB of DDR3 1333MHz clocked memory and a maximum of 4 graphics cards running in SLI or CrossFireX.

Unfortunately, the GTX 560 Ti doesn't support anything more than two-way SLI configurations, so users that want such a powerful setup have to shell out more money out of their pockets and go with better GPUs.

The GTX 560 Ti is also available in AVADirect's Nvidia 3D Vision Gaming PC, that starts at $1991.67, and pairs an Intel Core i7 900-series processor with 3GB of Crucial memory, a 500GB hard disk drive and an Acer 120Hz 3D enabled monitor.

At this time, AVADirect lists eight GTX 560 Ti models as being available, all of the coming factory overclocked.

Prices for the GPUs start at $275.31 for the Gigabyte GV-N560OC-1GI that has its core clocked at 900MHz and the memory at the standard 4000MHz, and go up to $321.42 for the EVGA GeForce GTX 560 Ti SuperClocked.

Just as Gigabyte's solution, the EVGA model also has its core clocked at 900MHz but also features faster memory that runs at 4212MHz.