MSI GeForce GTX 1070 Ti Titanium 8G review

Graphics cards 1049 Page 2 of 45 Published by

teaser

Product Showcase

Product Showcase

As always, we'll start off this review with our in-house photo-shoot. A few pages that show the ins and outs with photos, to get you a better idea to grasp what we are talking about in today's article.
   

Img_8811

 
So the MSI GeForce GTX 1070 Ti Titanium is based on its familiar nice matte black PCB and gets two power headers (one 8-pin and one 6-pin) for a little more overclocking headroom. The PCB is as mentioned matte black in color, and of course, the latest revision TwinFrozr VI cooler is being used yet with that meta/black look and feel. These cards will look just lovely in a dark themed PC. 

 

Img_8815

The card has one HDMI port and three DisplayPort connectors. Obviously, it has some LED elements as well. Once this card powers up, two things will come to mind: pretty nice aesthetics and the sheer silence it offers. Very nice. As board partners are not allowed to release the 1070 Ti model cards in their own configurations you will see many versions differentiating based on coolers and PCB design.

  • Boost: 1,683 MHz / Base: 1,607 MHz
  • Memory 8.0 Gbps GDDR5 (effective data-rate)

Img_8819

The card itself is wide, with a two and a half slot heat-pipe based cooling solution. In low-load situations fans are not active, thus up-to roughly 60 Degrees C on the GPU sensor, the cooling fans simply will not rotate, making this product hybrid in the sense that it cools both actively and passively. Check out the backside where there is a thick sturdy metal back-plate present, there are no real ventilation gaps, but the GPU backside has been left open, which is good. The card itself is a dual-slot solution, it is composite heat-pipe based, the GPU is cooled by a nickel-plated copper base plate connected to heat pipes on this MSI GAMING series graphics card. An SU heat pipe layout increases efficiency by reducing the length of a used heat pipe and a special SU-form design.



Img_8818

 
The 1070 Ti cards have a power design of 180 Watts, however, AIB partners applied complex phase designs as they overclock/tweak really well. So purely based on the tweaking design, expect some more power allowances. We'll check into that with our power measurements. The GeForce GTX 1070 Ti is DisplayPort 1.2 certified and DP 1.3/1.4 Ready, enabling support for 4K displays at 120Hz, 5K displays at 60Hz, and 8K displays at 60Hz. This model includes three DisplayPort connectors, one HDMI 2.0b connector, and one dual-link DVI connector. 

Share this content
Twitter Facebook Reddit WhatsApp Email Print