NVIDIA TITAN RTX Benchmarks
At 2500 bucks the NVIDIA TITAN RTX is expensive and targeted at the professional market. People, however, will always run games on them. A PC enthusiast named ‘Death’, shared photos of his TITAN RTX on twitter, including benchmarks.
The card belongs to “jbn1010” from South Korea, was liquid cooled and then overclocked. The card was overclocked to 2070 MHz (GPU) and 2025 MHz (memory) and that achieved 31,862 points in Fire Strike benchmark (overall score) with a nice 41,109 points in graphics test.
The card holds 576 tensor cores and 72 raytracing cores, slightly more than the RTX 2080 Ti with it's 544 and 68 values respectively. With 24 GB of GDDR6 memory, the TU102 GPU should have plenty of it. The flagship card has 4608 shader processors and is aimed at AI researchers and data scientists, rather than gamers; Nvidia claims the card "transforms the PC into a supercomputer" allowing faster training and inference of neural networks and enables researchers to experiment with larger neural networks and data sets.
Turing-based TITAN is currently available for 2,499 USD. Added, also JayzTwoCents released a video with TITAN RTX review benchmark results, see below.
Source: Death @ Twitter, JayzTwoCents via videocardz
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NV stocks are going to fall even further now. keep it going NV

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Who cares. JHH will compensate for investors.
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looks like ill be skipping this whole series with the way pricing. Normally u can spend the same as the previous gen and get a reasonable upgrade in performance with the way it is now ill be looking at a 2060 for the same money as i payed for my 1080 and there's no way ill be going backwards in performance lol.
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RT cores are linked to the ALUs - you can't double the number of RT cores without doubling the number of CUDA cores which would double the chipsize.
People doing 3D work don't require 60fps raytracing. With an Optix supported renderer they can preview their scene in relatively high quality in less than a second - down from 15 seconds or so on previous cards. Real time RT isn't required. What is required though is lots of VRAM - which again the Titan provides over the 2080Ti along with other performance increases via driver enhancements not enabled on geforce cards.
Thanks for the educational post, some things surely are tied to chip design, I never read or studied Turing arch tbh, I was making an unfounded assumption then.