Palit GeForce RTX 3070 Ti GamingPRO review

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Introduction

Palit GeForce RTX 3070 Ti GamingPRO review

Palit joins the review queue with a product aimed to stick at FE editions MSRP. The reference clocked Gaming PRO graphics card has a beefy cooler, but other than that was design to remain cost-effective. It's a graphics card series that will sit in between 3070 and 3080 performance levels, a product that is on the heels of the Radeon RX 6800 and 6800 XT. Yeah, there's no disputing it. It has been odd and even grotesque if we're talking computer components alone, silicon shortages, mining, scalpers. It's been sour grapes for a long time now. Likely that won't change the short term. People are almost fighting to grab a decently priced graphics card, often running up to three times the MSRP pricing. 

People even have been asking us, why are you still even reviewing these graphic cards when there're not available? The answer is simple: once they become available, you surely want to read up about their performance and get all facts together to make an informed decision.  NVIDIA is staying on its trajectory, implementing hash-rate limitations for consumer-grade GPUs and releasing refresh products pretty much as scheduled. Last week, we saw a refresh product that positioned itself between the GeForce RTX 3080 and 3090. That product would be the GeForce RTX 3080 Ti. NVIDIA, however, has one more product to add to the Ampere lineup, another Ti model, and this round, the 3070 Ti makes a fashionable appearance. Armed with a shader core count of 6144 units, this card is paired with 8GB of GDDR6X graphics memory running 19 Gbps. Though the VRAM value seems a tad low, it surely is bound to be a powerhouse and maybe even a bit of an animal. Please do remember that it was less than a year ago that NVIDIA launched their Ampere GPU series, September 2020, in fact. A week before announcements, specifications of the GeForce RTX 3060 Ti, 3070, 3080, and 3090 took a twist; the shader core count mysteriously doubled up from what everybody expected, to date something massively important to this product range as yes, the competition has gotten fiercer as well. NVIDIA's GPUs are fabricated on an 8nm node derived from Samsung. This process further develops Samsung's 10nm process; no EUV is applied in production just yet. This second wave of announcements sees the GeForce RTX 3080 Ti and 3070 Ti. The full desktop product line of Ampere for consumers now entails the GeForce RTX 3060 Ti 8GB, 3070 8GB GDDR6, RTX 3070 Ti 8GB, RTX 3080 10GB, RTX 3080 Ti 12GB, and RTX 3090; what we test today is an 8GB GDDR6X high-end product.

Much like the 3070, the 3070 Ti will base based on the existing GA104 GPU from NVIDIA; however, reconfigured with a move from GDDR6 towards GDDR6X. The card has an impressive 6144 Shader processors activated, and that's up 256 shader cores from the 5888 in the older RTX 3070 model.

Palit GeForce RTX 3070 Ti GamingPRO

As stated, Palit is back with their GamingPRO model for the RTX 3070 Ti. This is not an OC model, so that you won't get extended power limits available, but this is a product that runs reference clock frequencies and, as such, runs at reference performance. The trick here is that Palit wants to offer a product that remains close to MSRP (albeit we understand the difficult market dynamics there). The card has been fitted with that GA104 NVIDIA GA104 GPU; it has a proper 6144 shader cores activated and is now paired with 8GB GDDR6X graphics memory. Palit equipped the card with a semi-passive design; the three fans start to spin and cool once the GPU warms up. You'll notice it has 2x 8 (6+2) pin power connectors. Weighing in at close to 100g, this baby has been sized quite big,  29x140x5cm. The out of the box boost clock for this product is 1770 MHz (thus the reference clock), and its memory is clocked at reference 19Gbps (19 Gbps reference). The card certainly has spectacular looks, have a peek yourself and then start up this review, shall we? 

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