GeForce GTX Titan 3-way SLI and Multi monitor review

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For this article Nvidia supplied three GeForce GTX Titan cards and though you might just have read our reference article, I quickly wanted to show them to you with the help of some photo's, hey we know you love em.

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The cards are 100% reference design as you can see. Above the initial test run with 2-way SLI. BTW NVIDIA board partners will be allowed the creat their own SKUs, so expect liquid cooled versions and different clocked versions as well.

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The GeForce GTX Titan will come with 6 GB of graphics memory, that's definitely enough if you are a hardcore gamer with a monitor resolution of 1920x1200 and upwards. If you plan to game on triple monitors then 6GB starts to make a bit more sense as this will definitely help you out in the uber high resolutions and with hefty AA combinations.

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The GeForce GTX Titan has a maximum power consumption of 250 Watts (roughly 235W typical power draw), you'll need to power the card with two PCIe PEG leads from your power supply. We recommend a 550W power supply to start with (with one card of course) adn then add 250W per additional card installed.

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The GeForce GTX Titan PCB itself is based on a 6-phase power design with two added phases for the memory subsystem thus that's a 6+2 phase design. 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 500MB/s per lane to 1GB/s per lane. Like any high-end GeForce graphics card, Nvidia will allow you to opt for the multi-GPU road as you may pair two or three cards in one PC -- heck even four if you are very rich of course. But yea, you are looking at 3K worth of cards right there.

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