Poor | Average | Good | Excellent | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Effective clock speed | 14000 MHz Best: Gigabyte AORUS GeForce RTX 3090 MASTER 24G Effective clock speed: 19500 MHz |
Bus Type | PCI Express 3.0 x16 |
---|---|
Max monitors supported | 4 |
VR Ready | Yes |
API Supported |
|
CUDA cores | 2944 |
---|
Height | 4.5 in |
---|---|
Depth | 10.6 in |
Memory technology | GDDR6 SDRAM |
---|---|
Memory size | 8 GB |
Bandwidth | 448.0 GB/s |
Effective clock speed | 14000.0 MHz |
Max resolution | 7680 x 4320 |
---|
Minimum system power supply | 650.0 W |
---|
EVGA uses liquid cooling to help with noise and thermals, but it comes with a steep price tag.
The first partner card on the block.
EVGA XC Ultra Nvidia RTX 2080 The graphics card market has been in a weird state of flux recently. The RTX cards launched to much fanfare and just as much hate. Sure, they're bloody fast, but they're also darn expensive. Furthermore, at launch, DLSS, DXR and more were not ready for gamers to enjoy. That wasn't Nvidia's fault though, they made the hardware, then the software follows from developers. Fortunately, that's happening now, and the real value of RTX cards are starting to shine. Today, I have the latest EVGA RTX 2080 XC Ultra Gaming on our test bench. The
EVGA's RTX 2080 Ti XC Ultra comes with a large triple-slot, dual-fan cooler and is overclocked out of the box. EVGA picked smart, balanced fan settings, making this one of the quietest RTX 2080 Ti cards we tested so far, and it comes with the wonderful idle-fan-stop feature, too.
Devil R9 390X
Radeon RX 550 4GT LP OC
NVIDIA Tesla T4
AMD Radeon HD 8350
Radeon RX 570 RS
M9138