EVGA GeForce GTX 780 Ti SC SuperClocked ACX Review

Graphics cards 1048 Page 2 of 28 Published by

teaser

Product Showcase

Product Showcase

Let's move onwards to our photo-shoot. Two pages with photo's then and most of it from our own photo-shoot.

Img_9548

So as you can see the GeForce GTX 780 Ti from EVGA and yes, it is one familar looking dude.The card is using the new ACX dual-slot cooler which used two silent 90mm fans, double ball bearing based. ACX is short for Active Cooling Xtreme. The radiator covers the VRM and even memory area. The cooler can dissipate roughly 450W of heat whilst remaining silent. As a result under full load this card manages to stay below 65 degrees C in our testing. Absolutely impressive. The card is 10.5 Inches in length which is like 27 cm for those in that like and reside in the Metric system.

Img_9549

With the GeForce GTX 780 Ti you will receive four display connectors, you'll spot a full size Display port connector, one full size HDMI connector and two DVI connectors (dual-link). You can combine these connectors to setup a surround view (multi-monitor) setup. One card will give you more than sufficient performance to play your games on three monitors. To date, we still receive this question a lot, but dual-link DVI does not mean you can hook up two monitors to one connector. Dual-link means double the signal, that way monitor resolutions over 1920x1200 can be supported or you could use a 120Hz monitor. So explained very simply, dual-link DVI supports high-resolution (above 1920x1200) or high-refresh rate (120Hz) monitors.

Img_9547

The GeForce GTX 780 Ti will have its price set a notch above GeForce the GTX 780 (MSRP 699 USD), the price premium does show in things like the cooling and sheer silence. EVGA offers this SC ACX edition factory clocked for you at 1007MHz with a Boost clock of 1071 MHz. And as our article will show later on, there's room for tweaking as we got this puppy running stable over 1200 MHz on the boost frequency


7820_img_9546

Each GeForce GTX 780 Ti will have a maximum power design of 250 Watts, but they are made to a little tweaking as well. As such the cards are using an one 150W 8-pin PEG, and one 75W 6-pin PEG (PCI EXpress Graphics) connector. Another 75 to 150 Watts is delivered though the PCI slot and thus motherboard. This should be plenty for a decent overclocking session.

Share this content
Twitter Facebook Reddit WhatsApp Email Print