ZOTAC GeForce GTX 1080 Ti AMP Extreme review -
Product Showcase
Product Showcase
Let's start with our photo-shoot. A few pages that show the ins and outs with photos, all taken with an in-house photo-shoot of course.
The product can be spotted under product (SKU) code ZT-P10810C-10P and will start selling for roughly ~900 euros, in the USA you are looking at or just over 800 USD. The card has very nice looks with that dark/grey design and LED lighting. The card is based upon a nice matte black PCB and gets 16+2 (likely 8x2 doubled up + 2 for memory) phases and uses two power headers (8-pin) for a little more overclocking headroom.
As board partners are allowed to release the 1080 Ti model cards in their own configurations you will see many versions, mostly based on customized PCBs/components and the obviously mandatory different cooling solutions. The Xtreme Edition has nice clocks and a backplate, all quite impressive as well. The card has default clock frequencies of 1759 MHz (boost) / 1645 (base) MHz with a faster than reference clocked 11 GB GDDR5X / 11200 MHz effective data-rate on the memory.
Looking at the rear side you'll be impressed as to what they did here, a nicely designed backplate and a LED (RGB) lit logo. The card itself is a near triple slot solution. With only 2-way SLI available these days, the size got less important we feel, so we are okay with that. The cooling system is based on a 3x fan system. In low-load situations the three fans do not spin. Thus up-to roughly 55~60 Degrees C the fans won't even spin. At the backside you will see a LED activated Zotac logo and sure, a thick sturdy metal backplate with plenty of venting spaces applied as well.
The card will offer five display connectors; you'll spot three DisplayPort connectors, one HDMI connector and a DVI connector. That does mean there is little ventilation available as rear exhaust. DisplayPort is 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 (using two cables). The card includes three DisplayPort connectors, one HDMI 2.0b connector, and one dual-link DVI connector. Up to four display heads can be driven simultaneously from one card. The GTX 1080 Ti display pipeline supports HDR gaming, as well as video encoding and decoding. New to Pascal is HDR Video (4K@60 10/12b HEVC Decode), HDR Record/Stream (4K@60 10b HEVC Encode), and HDR Interface Support (DP 1.4).
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