If you are shopping for a new high performance graphics card, then Nvidia's GTX780 Ti surely has a spot right at the top of the list. Today we look at a highly overclocked and customised model – the Inno3D GeForce GTX 780Ti iChill DHS. This card ships with one of the highest out of the box clocks and features a hefty three fan cooler. The talking point? – it ships with an Allen Key so you can take it apart. If you can afford the £600 asking price is this the card you need for the next upgrade?
Make no mistake, the Inno3D GTX780 Ti Ti iChill DHS graphics card is a monster. The triple slot cooler looks stunning – almost like a futuristic weapon you would see in a Science Fiction movie. There are three 90mm fans which take centerstage and they force cool air over the thick heatpipes and heatsinks underneath. We will get a closer look at this later in the review, when we take it apart.
Ref Nvidia GTX780Ti Inno3D GTX780Ti iChill DHS |
Ref Nvidia GTX780 |
Ref Nvidia GTX Titan | |
GPU | GK110 | GK110 | GK110 |
Technology | 28nm | 28nm | 28nm |
Transistors | 7.1Bn | 7.1Bn | 7.1Bn |
ROP’s | 48 | 48 | 48 |
TMU’s | 240 | 192 | 224 |
CUDA Cores |
2880 | 2304 | 2688 |
Pixel Filrate | 42.0 GPixel/s 52.1 GPixel/s |
41.4 GPixel/s | 40.2 GPixel/s |
Memory Size | 3GB | 3GB | 6GB |
Texture Filrate | 210.2 GTexel/s 260.5 GTexel/s |
165.7 GTexel/s | 187.5 GTexel/s |
Bus Width | 384 bit | 384 bit | 384 bit |
Bandwidth | 336 GB/s | 288.4 GB/s | 288.4 GB/s |
GPU clock speed | 876mhz 1,085mhz |
863mhz | 837mhz |
Boost clock speed | 928mhz 1,150mhz |
902mhz | 876mhz |
Memory clock speed | 1,750mhz 1,820mhz |
1,502mhz | 1,502mhz |
We have reviewed many GTX780 Ti's before, however the Inno3D GTX780 Ti iChill DHS receives a staggering clock increase from 876mhz to 1,085mhz. The Boost Clock is subsequently increased from 928mhz to 1,150mhz. The 3GB of GDDR5 memory is clocked to 1,820mhz (7.28Gbps effective).
It’s a great card for performance and some light future-proofing… At the cost of about $700 and tax… that is hard money to justify, unless you know you will not regret it. Again, the price is probably the only ‘con’ but at the same time, it is difficult to justify the high price as a con, when this is a company’s flagship device we are talking about. If anything, I am just glad it didn’t start at a price much closer to the Titan (for how it performs, compared to the GTX 780)… that is just $300 dollars way north of the 780 Ti (or $600 if its SLI).
Hard to go wrong with one of these.