Palit GeForce GTX 660 Ti Jetstream review

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Product Showcase Palit GeForce GTX 660 Ti JetStream

 

GeForce GTX 660 Ti

And as you can see there are GDDR5 SMT solder traces next to each RAM IC. So perhaps there will be a three GB model released. This however remains unconfirmed. The card is PCIe gen 3.0 compatible. Going from PCIe Gen 2 to Gen 3 doubles the bandwidth available to the add-on cards installed, from 500 MB/s per lane to 1 GB/s per lane. You can see two SLI connectors, the 660 series is allowed to work with up to three cards in SLI mode. For proper scaling and little driver issues as possible we always recommend to stick to 2 cards in multi-GPU mode.

Palit gives the card two DVI connectors (dual-link), one HDMI and a DisplayPort connector (full size).

GeForce GTX 660 Ti

The cooler is a good chunk longer opposed to the PCB. Incredibly silent and the performance is great, the JetStream series of cooling has done Palit justice alright. Though the 3-slot design might be hinder to some of you.

GeForce GTX 660 Ti

The GeForce GTX 660 Ti  has a maximum power consumption of roughly 150 Watts, the typical power raw will actually be a good notch lower. You'll need to power the card with two 6-pin PCIe PEG lead from your power supply. Due to the small PCB the connectors look a little oddly placed, but that is because the cooler is longer than the actual PCB. Power supply wise we recommend a 550 power supply to start with. With one card that is.

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