Nvidia GeForce GTX Titan-Z review

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Let's start with our photo-shoot. Three pages worth of photos then and most of it from our own photo-shoot.

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Nvidia GeForce GTX TITAN Z launched at a $2,999 price-point / 2850 EURO, the Dual-GPU graphics card was launched last month and slowly found its way to re and etail. The cooling solution on the card is a triple slot cooler, it pushes an increased volume of air to the internal heatsink chamber with direct contact surfaces dissipating heat with the help of heatpipes. All that GPU violence is cooled with just one fan.

 

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With the Titan Z you will receive four display connectors, you'll spot a full size DisplayPort connector, one full size HDMI connector and two DVI connectors (dual-link). You can combine these connectors to set up a surround view (multi-monitor) setup. One card will give you more than sufficient performance to play your games on three monitors. Quite honestly I do not understand why NVIDIA chose 3 different connectors on this product. 1x DVI and three DisplayPorts would have had my preference. 
 

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The GeForce GTX Titan Z features two GK110 GPUs sharing 5760 Shader Cores, 448 TMUs and 96 ROPs. With a 384-bit x 2 memory bus it has 12 GB of graphics memory. 
Each GPU will have a maximum power design of 250 Watts, so expect a 450~500 Watt TDP on this product. 

 

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The memory is clocked at 7 GHz (effective datarate). The GPU core clock speeds are set at a 705 MHz base and a 876 MHz boost frequency. The card offers 8.1 TFlops and 2.3 TFlops of double precision. Interesting to see is that the card temperature remains at give or take 80 Degrees C, once it hits that threshold, the GPUs will actually downclock even further to meet that temperature target.

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