Undervolting the Yeston GeForce RTX 4070 Ti

Graphics cards 1049 Page 3 of 20 Published by

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Product photos

Product photos

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The RTX 4000 series graphics cards have HDMI 2.1 and DisplayPort 1.4 ports. Unfortunately -  NVIDIA did not opt for the new DP 2.1 standard already. The IO panel is an air vent with connectors supporting 8K 60 Hz HDR via a single HDMI cable.

 

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The GeForce RTX 4070 Ti is a significant improvement for anyone running a GeForce GTX 1080 Ti or GeForce RTX 2080. The RTX 4070 Ti is compatible with the latest features, including DLSS 3 technology, thanks to its support for NVIDIA’s newest RT and Tensor Cores, which are more potent than earlier GPUs.


 

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Cooling is critical for a graphics card of this caliber, and the RTX 4070 Ti has an oversized heatsink. The card measures 330 mm in length, 136 mm in height, and 67mm in depth. 


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The weight is almost 1.4 kg.


 

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When not in use, all three fans turn off. The heatsink consists of six 6 mm heatpipes. Temperatures are unlikely to be an issue, and thanks to the aluminum backplate, the card doesn’t sag.

 

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The RTX 4070 Ti’s two encoders make it ideal for broadcasting and video editing, and they also support the advanced video coding format AV1. The card also has an aluminum backplate. RBG lighting on the card can be configured using Yeston’s software.

 

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The cards are equipped with the much-discussed 12VHPWR power connector header (converter cable included that feeds from 8-pin connectors). There is no BIOS change possible (silent/performance). As expected, the display outputs include three DisplayPort 1.4 and one HDMI 2.1.


 

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Documentation and an adapter that transforms two 8-pin PCIe power inputs to a 12-pin power connector are included among the included materials. Do not bend the cable too close to the connector; keep a 3-4cm distance from that plastic connector. RGB lighting is possible to synchronize via motherboard utility thanks to the usage of the ARGB connector. 

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