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Palit GTX 1080 Ti Super JetStream 11GB Review

Rating: 8.5.

Any GTX 1080 Ti will be an expensive purchase but there are graphics card vendors meeting more competitive price points. Palit has always done well, particularly in the UK market, at delivering affordable graphics cards at similar levels of quality and performance to rivals like ASUS or MSI, who usually charge a considerable premium.

Palit's range of JetStream graphics cards have consistently proven themselves worthy at KitGuru. In recent times the Palit GTX 1060, GTX 980 and GTX 970 have all performed strongly with scores over 8 out of 10. Today's test focus, the Palit GTX 1080 Ti Super JetStream, is another iteration of Palit's JetStream range.

Palit offers five variations on the GTX 1080 Ti graphics cards for prospective buyers – Founder's Edition, GameRock, GameRock Premium, JetStream and Super JetStream. This Super JetStream model is not Palit's highest clocked GTX 1080 Ti, that accolade goes to the GameRock Premium, but the Super JetStream is not far off with an out of the box boost clock of 1671MHz, up from the stock Nvidia boost frequency of 1582MHz.

The JetStream cooling solution is a dual-fan implementation, like the MSI GTX 1080 Ti Gaming X, and Palit doesn't skimp on quality or features either. There's still RGB lighting, a backplate, dual BIOS with switches and a semi-passive fan mode. A GTX 1080 Ti that ticks all the boxes and that is competitive in price, what more could a PC Gamer ask for?

GPU  Nvidia GTX 1080 Ti Palit GTX 1080 Ti JetStream Palit GTX 1080 Ti Super JetStream Palit GTX 1080 Ti GameRock Premium
Base Clock
 1480 MHz 1480 MHz  1557 MHz 1594 MHz
GPU Boost Clock  1582 MHz 1582 MHz  1671 MHz  1708 MHz
Memory Clock Effective
 11008 MHz  11008 MHz 11008 MHz 11008 MHz
Memory Bandwidth  484 GB/s  484 GB/s  484 GB/s  484 GB/s
Price (£)  from £650 £660 £680 £670

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8 comments

  1. Nikolas Karampelas

    People around me get 1070/80 and 580/70 and I’m like “My radeon 7850 is just fine” 🙁
    I need an upgrade.

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  3. This card uses a very good quality 12+2 power phase VRM. It has 6 doubled phases + 2 real memory phases which makes the VRM run cool.

    For example the MSI Gaming X 1080ti uses 8 real phases and this spreads the heat on fewer components which generates more hotspots.

    Please correct the article, thank you!

  4. 7850 isn’t far off a R9 270/X or 370, and slightly faster than an RX 460, and even the 560 for that matter. You’re not really missing out on much except efficiency.

  5. Nikolas Karampelas

    While yes in older titles they are not very different, in newer titles 560 will just fly away because of better and more efficient cgn cores. Also the 4GB of VRAM will make a big deal because I have the 1GB version (stupid decision, to save 30 euros back then) and it shows.

  6. True, i’ve a 2GB R9 270X in the pc which is hooked up to the tv, its only a 720p tv which is shite but its good as nothing needs more than the 2GB lol, but in terms of raw power theyre roughly the same, got it overclocked to 1100mhz core and 1500mhz memory while undervolted, runs really cool, friend has an RX 460 for 1080p gaming and cant really say much more except than its got 4GB of vram, though even at stock it runs hotter (suprisingly) and pulls more power?!

    AMD needs to make a big step forward, i held out on upgrading in the hopes of vega beating the 1080ti but as soon as the frontier edition dropped i jumped right onto that 1080ti, modded it to remove power target and it sits at 2025mhz 24/7 along with 12ghz on the vram up from 11ghz.

  7. You got this particular card reviewed overclocked to 2025mhz? There is an older version of it, the plain Jetstream one, any ideas how much that one can be overclocked by? I can’t find a proper review for that other card.

  8. I believe you are right. I stand corrected.