‘Photos show GeForce GTX 1070 Ti from Gigabyte’

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Photos have surfaced online that would show the Gigabyte GTX 1070 Ti Gaming. You can’t tell from the appearance whether it is actually a 1070 Ti, but the video card looks different from the existing GTX 1070 Gaming of the brand.

The photos were put online by VideoCardz, a website that regularly publishes information and images before the official announcement of video cards. The design of the card is similar to existing Gigabyte graphics cards with WindForce 3X coolers, but the PCB is slightly shorter than the 1070’s and the heatsink is also different.

The Gigabyte GeForce GTX 1070 Ti Gaming would be a variant without an overclock. This follows from the naming of previous video cards from the manufacturer. There are rumors that the GTX 1070 Ti cannot be overclocked. However, it is still unclear whether this means that manufacturers will not supply overclocked versions, or that Nvidia will also fix the clock speed for end users.

Nvidia has not officially announced anything about the GTX 1070 Ti. There have been rumors about the arrival of the video cards for a while and various sources state that the card will be announced on October 26. The GTX 1070 Ti is expected to have more cudacores and run at a higher clock speed than the current GTX 1070.

The fourth image shows the existing Gigabyte GTX 1070 G1 Gaming. Compared to the new model, it can be seen that a different heatsink is used and the pcb has a different size.

GeForce GTX 1080 Ti GeForce GTX 1080 11Gbit/s GeForce GTX 1070 Ti (*rumor) GeForce GTX 1070

GPU Cudacores tmus Rop’s computing power Corekloksn. boost clocksn. Memory clocks Memory Memory bus tdp
16nm FF GP102 16nm FF GP104 16nm FF GP104* 16nm FF GP104

3584

2560

2432*

1920

224

160

152*

120

88

64

64*

64

10.6tflops

8.2tflops

7.8tflops*

5.8tflops

1480MHz

1607MHz

1607MHz*

1506MHz

1582MHz

1733MHz

1683MHz*

1683MHz

11Gbps

11Gbps

8Gbps*

8Gbps

11GB gddr5x

8GB gddr5x

8GB gddr5*

8GB gddr5

352-bit

256-bit

256 bit*

256-bit

250 W

180W

180W*

150W

Overview prepared by VideoCardz

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ComputingGeForceGeForce GTXGPUGraphicsGTXGTX 1080 TiMemoryNVidiaOverclockRumorRumors
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