Nvidia Launches GTX 980 And GTX 970 "Maxwell" Graphics Cards ($549 & $329)

Damn. I'm going to need a bigger case.

I'm kind of scared about this but I think I can just have the end of it stick into my HDD bay, lol =X. The power connectors don't seem any further back than the Gigabyte 670 I currently have, the extra length is mostly their heat sink, so that should be fine I hope.
 
What's the best double fan 970 case? Evga, Msi, or Asus? I always bought evga version but I heard this year they are worst or something.
 
Is it really worth upgrading now? I mean, the dye is still the same size as before right?

Also, I didnt find on the nvidia site if the card has native DX12 support...

I'm tempted to upgrade from my GTX680 but I'm thinking I should just wait until they get the new, smaller chipsets out next year (hopefully)...
 
Gigabyte always makes stupid-long cards for some reason, it's one reason I started shying away from them for GPUs. They're a pain in my Fortress-02.

I'm a bit of Gigabyte fanboy unfortunately. I love the look and performance of the Windforce design too much. :P

I'm kind of scared about this but I think I can just have the end of it stick into my HDD bay, lol =X. The power connectors don't seem any further back than the Gigabyte 670 I currently have, the extra length is mostly their heat sink, so that should be fine I hope.

I think I'm going to just remove my bay if I can't get it to fit and use some adapters to stick extra HDDs in my optical drive bay.
 
Is it really worth upgrading now? I mean, the dye is still the same size as before right?

Also, I didnt find on the nvidia site if the card has native DX12 support...

I'm tempted to upgrade from my GTX680 but I'm thinking I should just wait until they get the new, smaller chipsets out next year (hopefully)...
Says DX 12 support on nvidias website, so I presume so, but who knows if that just means compatible.
 
I'm not going to wait for 20nm.. there's no guarantee that the first gen will see a significant improvement over these models. And you just know there will be a premium cost for them. I'm really impressed with what Nvidia has done here with the drop in power requirement. I'll now have the option to SLI a 970 later on with my current power supply.
 
All you people having CPUs at 4hgz or more... Have you actually OCed your CPUs at +1GHz or something?

I have an i5 4670 at 3.4Ghz stock speed and i feel like a peasant.
 
Apparently Nvidia is supporting Adaptive Sync with these, according to Sweclockers.

I wonder if they'll call it GSync or something else. In any case, good news for people buying a monitor in 2015 (dependent on how good these monitors turn out to be, I guess).
 
All you people having CPUs at 4hgz or more... Have you actually OCed your CPUs at +1GHz or something?

I have an i5 4670 at 3.4Ghz stock speed and i feel like a peasant.
Do you have a 4670 or 4670k? The 'k' version is unlocked and overclockable and can pretty comfortably be run at at least 4.0GHz with a $25 aftermarket CPU cooler.
 
Do you have a 4670 or 4670k? The 'k' version is unlocked and overclockable and can pretty comfortably be run at at least 4.0GHz with a $25 aftermarket CPU cooler.
I have a non k CPU because i didn't plan on overclocking. I just find it impressive that CPUs can now be overclocked so high...
 
Total noob question: Is it worth upgrading the GPU on a fairly older machine? I have a desktop with an E8400 (dual core @ 3.0Ghz) and an 8800GT. Can anyone advise if switching to a modern graphics card'd be worth it if I kept the old processor?
 
Total noob question: Is it worth upgrading the GPU on a fairly older machine? I have a desktop with an E8400 (dual core @ 3.0Ghz) and an 8800GT. Can anyone advise if switching to a modern graphics card'd be worth it if I kept the old processor?

Not with a dual core, no, i'd get an entirely new pc at that point.
 
Pretty much.

I personally think these are in a rather odd position though for anyone looking at a new card with something relatively recent (Kepler up), as going off assumed time frames/speculation, the full (GM200/210) card is going to be here in ~6 months. If we consider the next big PC game (Witcher 3) is coming early next-year I'd be inclined to hold out for now.

I did a quick search and GM210 will most likely be the Titan replacement, meaning it'll have enterprise features, be priced prohibitively and so won't be an alternative to the 9xx line for the average consumer. What we've got now are actually the 'full' versions of these specific chips.
 
Total noob question: Is it worth upgrading the GPU on a fairly older machine? I have a desktop with an E8400 (dual core @ 3.0Ghz) and an 8800GT. Can anyone advise if switching to a modern graphics card'd be worth it if I kept the old processor?
Maybe not a card as powerful as a 980/970 but a friend of mine upgraded his VGA from a 8800GT to a GTX 660 while having the same CPU as yours. And the difference it made was massive. Plus, as i read lately, games will be less and less CPU intensive and much more GPU depended from now on.
 
I'm very eager to hear what kind of performance you are getting. I have 920 @4.2GHz paired with 12GB of ram. I plan on gaming in 1440p on this rig.

Card should be here by Wednesday. I'm expecting some serious performance improvement over my 5 and a half year old 4890 1gb.
 
Maybe not a card as powerful as a 980/970 but a friend of mine upgraded his VGA from a 8800GT to a GTX 660 while having the same CPU as yours. And the difference it made was massive. Plus, as i read lately, games will be less and less CPU intensive and much more GPU depended from now on.

Anyone who is planning on getting one of these newer cards should still upgrade to a quad core or at least the Pentium Anniversary edition and overclock that thing.

Save up for a completely new PC, that CPU will limit you.
 
I did a quick search and GM210 will most likely be the Titan replacement, meaning it'll have enterprise features, be priced prohibitively and so won't be an alternative to the 9xx line for the average consumer.

I know it will be a Titan replacement although I think Nvidia will reserve the £800+ segment for dual-GPU this time and the 'Big Maxwell' will slot in £650+. With that in mind, I personally consider the ~£470 asking price for the second string 980 to be priced prohibitively for the average consumer but if £200 more is netting you significant more card - prosumer features or otherwise - it would be a sounder buy, I think.

What we've got now are actually the 'full' versions of these specific chips.

Yup, that's why I named GM200/210 specifically.
 
Card should be here by Wednesday. I'm expecting some serious performance improvement over my 5 and a half year old 4890 1gb.

My pair of 5850s was serving me quite well (somewhere between 7950/7970 in perf.).. but I'm getting destroyed by VRAM requirements lately. I'm just putting up with the stuttering basically. :/
 
2h9pms.jpg

I just installed these two bad boys.

Both are 35°C in idle atm, gonna start up some Minecraft now.
 
Gigabyte always makes stupid-long cards for some reason, it's one reason I started shying away from them for GPUs. They're a pain in my Fortress-02.
Seriously. I won't be able to slide the G1 into my case, I'll have to put it in the case diagonally before plugging it. Thankfully the depth is about the same so it won't be a problem getting it into the socket.
 
Just a heads up:

Do NOT purchase these cards for GPU CG rendering if you use 780s and upwards, unless you want to go two 970's on a limited power budget. Their scores are disappointing. Get a couple of used GTX 5xx/GTX 7xx/Titans instead.

Following the instructions in the thread, on my MSI GTX 780 gaming @ stock:

Direct Lighting
18.68 Ms/sec

Path tracing
5.61 Ms/sec

PMC
4.68 Ms/sec
 
I'm kind of scared about this but I think I can just have the end of it stick into my HDD bay, lol =X. The power connectors don't seem any further back than the Gigabyte 670 I currently have, the extra length is mostly their heat sink, so that should be fine I hope.

Gigabyte 670 to 970 upgrade here too...

I opened my case up, I have 13 inches before it hits the hdd cage, its just gonna fit. :O
 
Stuck deciding between the EVGA 04G-P4-2975-KR and the GIGABYTE GV-N970G1. They're both the same price, and of course both out of stock everywhere I've looked at the moment. But the EVGA has slightly higher clock speeds, and I'm assuming it's not as long as the Windforce with 3 fans.

I guess I'll end up with whichever comes back in stock first. Anybody know how long it usually takes for retailers to get more of these cards after release?
 
Just a heads up:

Do NOT purchase these cards for GPU CG rendering if you use 780s and upwards, unless you want to go two 970's on a limited power budget. Their scores are disappointing. Get a couple of used GTX 5xx/GTX 7xx/Titans instead.

Following the instructions in the thread, on my MSI GTX 780 gaming @ stock:

Direct Lighting
18.68 Ms/sec

Path tracing
5.61 Ms/sec

PMC
4.68 Ms/sec
Damn, I was hoping to reduce my blender render time too with this one.
 
Is the Zotac 970 a POS or something? Why is it so much cheaper? I see the clocks are slightly lower, but it probably overclocks pretty well anyway.
 
Stuck deciding between the EVGA 04G-P4-2975-KR and the GIGABYTE GV-N970G1. They're both the same price, and of course both out of stock everywhere I've looked at the moment. But the EVGA has slightly higher clock speeds, and I'm assuming it's not as long as the Windforce with 3 fans.

I guess I'll end up with whichever comes back in stock first. Anybody know how long it usually takes for retailers to get more of these cards after release?

The review here of the Gigabyte 970 when talking about overclocking it, got it up to stock 980 performace.

http://www.guru3d.com/articles_pages/gigabyte_geforce_gtx_970_g1_gaming_review,26.html
 
Still trying decide whether to pull the trigger on the MSI 970 or not coming from a 2500k/GTX 570. Seems like a no brainer but the local price is pretty bad ($519AUD) and I don't fancy importing a video card.

FYI Australia are getting the other cards in this week too.

EVGA is ~$450 for the normal, $480 for the super clock.
Asus is $500.
Gigabyte $550.
 
Just a heads up:

Do NOT purchase these cards for GPU CG rendering if you use 780s and upwards, unless you want to go two 970's on a limited power budget. Their scores are disappointing. Get a couple of used GTX 5xx/GTX 7xx/Titans instead.

Following the instructions in the thread, on my MSI GTX 780 gaming @ stock:

Direct Lighting
18.68 Ms/sec

Path tracing
5.61 Ms/sec

PMC
4.68 Ms/sec

Look further on in the thread, after updating drivers they're getting double the Titan score.

Edit: Nevermind, looks like I need to read further in the thread...
 
Is the Zotac 970 a POS or something? Why is it so much cheaper? I see the clocks are slightly lower, but it probably overclocks pretty well anyway.

I've been wondering this too, they seem to be the only cards in stock anywhere, and while I've been holding out for one of the quiet Asus/MSI cards, my patience is starting to wear thin.
 
Zotac cards are always last to be in stock, during almost every new generation release. Its almost like a tradition!

I have no idea of the quality of their product.
 
Anyone have any experience with Zotec? They seem to be the only cards in stock anywhere, and while I've been holding out for one of the quiet Asus/MSI cards, my patience is starting to wear thin.

Their cards are just as good as anyone other vendor. I've had cards from them before and they are great.
 
Gigabyte always makes stupid-long cards for some reason, it's one reason I started shying away from them for GPUs. They're a pain in my Fortress-02.

Fellow FT02 owner here. What card do you have in it now? Do you try to use only reference blower style to avoid the heat pipe orientation problem? If you are using a heatpipe cooler on your GPU, does it work how it's supposed to?
 
Is the Zotac 970 a POS or something? Why is it so much cheaper? I see the clocks are slightly lower, but it probably overclocks pretty well anyway.
Just aren't as well known I think. They have to price it cheaper else people wouldn't buy them over the more well known brands.
I've been wondering this too, they seem to be the only cards in stock anywhere, and while I've been holding out for one of the quiet Asus/MSI cards, my patience is starting to wear thin.
I had a GTX 260 Zotac card before my current 660 TI and it was fine. They also offered a 5 year warranty if you registered your card within a month in the UK(not sure about elsewhere). How good their RMA services are, I don't know since I never had any issues in the 3 years I used it.
 
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