Inno3D GeForce GTX 1080 iChill Black
Inno3D introduces its new flagship Inno3D GeForce GTX 1080 iChiLL BLACK. The iChiLL BLACK edition stands for Hybrid cooling solution that combines super-silent air-flow with water-cooling.
Taking place at the absolute top-of-the-hill, the latest descendant of INNO3D's GeForce GTX 1080 high-end graphics card family, comes with 8GB GDDR5X at a bit-rate of 256bit and a core clock rate at 1759MHz. The DVI, DP and HDMI ports enables the gamer to connect with up to three screens for the ultimate gaming experience.
"We're aiming to satisfy the enthusiast gamer who has ridiculous demands and with our iChiLL BLACK edition they get the Brute among High-End Graphics Cards" states Stanley Wong, Managing Director at INNO3D. "The Hybrid cooling solution makes it possible to squeeze every single drop of performance out of the highest performing components. It not only results in an awesome performing product, it also runs at extremely low noise levels."
At launch, products will be immediately available on sale at top-resellers across every region. For local pricing please check with your local supplier.
For more information, visit the product page.
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Senior Member
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Joined: 2012-04-30
Unless they bin the chips, and "you" have high temps inside the case, wc a 1000 series card is pretty much useless, since Nv limits will determine max clocks.
I have basically room temp +10*F inside my case, and my 1060 will boost to 2025 without added volt/mhz, and max boost is 2100 when adding 80mhz to core, while card uses up to 80% power and stays at 60*C while silent.
Senior Member
Posts: 3364
Joined: 2014-10-20
Unless they bin the chips, and "you" have high temps inside the case, wc a 1000 series card is pretty much useless, since Nv limits will determine max clocks.
I have basically room temp +10*F inside my case, and my 1060 will boost to 2025 without added volt/mhz, and max boost is 2100 when adding 80mhz to core, while card uses up to 80% power and stays at 60*C while silent.
I would say right off the bat that 60c is a lie, it would be absolutely higher than that. Secondly I assume you use 1080p monitor, at 60hz, and without gsync?
Make it 1440p or 4k, instantly +10/+15 degree on top, add 144hz, instantly +3-5c, add gsync, instantly +2-3c, and you would hover around 70-75c in games on max settings without FPS cap.
Make any card SLI and you run at another extra 5-10c. Hence Yes WC any card DOES make sense, especially for people like me that like things smooth, cool and long lasting with stable clock rates.
All those stories about "bla bla my card runs at 90c and its FINE" is not fine. I personally had gtx680 burn down after couple of days playing Tomb Raider 2013 back in the day on 86c. Had AMD cards burn down after working at 85c while rendering (AMD never again). Or two 670's in SLI that i had on which one card (lower one which was even cooler) just stopped working. Literally just died during rendering. And then you spend days or weeks RMA'ing and wasting time and money.
And no those cards weren't stock blower cards, all of them are always fancy two-three fan ones, however it doesnt matter, they are all still Bad at cooling. Because they cant keep your GPU cool.
Senior Member
Posts: 3364
Joined: 2014-10-20
Quite an unsuccessful branding combination.