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12GB
384-Bit
GDDR6X
PCI Express 4.0
1725 MHz
750W
Brand | EVGA |
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Series | XC3 |
Model | 12G-P5-3955-KR |
Interface | PCI Express 4.0 |
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Chipset Manufacturer | NVIDIA |
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GPU Series | NVIDIA GeForce RTX 30 Series |
GPU | GeForce RTX 3080 Ti |
Boost Clock | 1725 MHz |
CUDA Cores | 10240 |
Effective Memory Clock | 19000 MHz |
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Memory Size | 12GB |
Memory Interface | 384-Bit |
Memory Type | GDDR6X |
DirectX | DirectX 12 Ultimate |
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OpenGL | OpenGL 4.6 |
HDMI | 1 x HDMI 2.1 |
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DisplayPort | 3 x DisplayPort 1.4a |
Virtual Reality Ready | Yes |
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Cooler | Triple Fans |
Operating Systems Supported | Windows 10 64-bit |
Thermal Design Power | 350W |
System Requirements | 750 Watt or greater power supply. PCI Express, PCI Express 2.0, PCI Express 3.0 or PCI Express 4.0 compliant motherboard with one graphics slot. Two available 8-pin or 6+2-pin PCIe power dongles. |
Recommended PSU Wattage | 750W |
Power Connector | 2 x 8-Pin |
HDCP Ready | 2.3 |
Features | EVGA iCX3 Cooling Adjustable ARGB LED All-Metal Backplate, Pre-Installed Built for EVGA Precision X1 2nd Gen Ray Tracing Cores 3rd Gen Tensor Cores PCI Express Gen 4 Microsoft DirectX 12 Ultimate GDDR6X Graphics Memory NVIDIA DLSS NVIDIA GeForce Experience NVIDIA G-SYNC NVIDIA GPU Boost Game Ready Drivers 7th Gen NVIDIA Encoder 5th Gen NVIDIA Decoder Vulkan RT API, OpenGL 4.6 DisplayPort 1.4a HDCP 2.3 VR Ready Supports 4K 120Hz HDR, 8K 60Hz HDR and Variable Refresh Rate as specified in HDMI 2.1 |
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Max GPU Length | 285 mm |
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Card Dimensions (L x H) | 11.23" x 4.38" |
Slot Width | 2.2 Slots |
Date First Available | June 02, 2021 |
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Pros: - Handles ray tracing with ease @ 1440p - Stays cool under load (~75°C while gaming) - Metal backplate with airflow holes - No noticeable coil whine
Cons: - Costs way too dang much. (This is Nvidia's fault mostly.) - Heatsink could be a bit beefier. Although no issues so far.
Overall Review: This is a fantastic card overall. Only complaint is the price but that's the nature of the beast these days. Reason I jumped on it is because I was picked in the Newegg Shuffle. Good luck out their gamers! There's good news on the horizon! ;)
Pros: -Crazy fast -4k Ultra settings? No problem
Cons: -Loud in small case -Power hungry -Hot
Overall Review: I bought this for gaming on LG C1 4k TV, and it does not disappoint. It has pretty much been: go into game settings, turn everything up as high as it will go, then sit back as this thing crushes it. As an added benefit, it has turned my computer into a space heater, which is a win in my area. Guess that happens when you suck 350 watts out of my wall. Get a good power supply. You're going to need it. And probably add a few case fans to your cart while you're at it. But hey, in the grand scheme of things when you're dropping this silly, nearly obscene amount on a graphics card, what's a couple extra bucks for some fans? I digress. I upgraded from a 3060 ti (awesome, but not at 4k). With that card, heat wasn't an issue in my Asus Tuf 301 case. I had front mounted my AIO and life was good. Then along comes this beast. Had to swap out front mounted for a rear mounted 120mm AIO because of case and get the front mounted fans blowing on this thing. If you find yourself in a similar situation, go with a case upgrade instead. It would have been quieter. It gets pretty loud to cool itself in a smaller sized case. I like to keep it below 80C, which requires the fans run around 85-90%. Loud, but not terrible as I play games with volume loud anyway. It's just when I pause to remove a layer of clothing due the heat that I'm reminded that I have a serious problem with computers. If you've read this far, you most likely do too. Just do it. You know you want to.
Pros: Everything
Cons: Expensive
Overall Review: The best graphic card I ever had. I won the shuffle the same this card was available. Thank negg so much.
Pros: - Almost as fast as 3090 - Less expensive than 3090
Cons: - VRAM could have been more - Still expensive at $1,200
Overall Review: If you are not planning to play games in 8K, than you will be better off with 3080 Ti. qHD gamer? Than don't waste your money and get a regular 3080... if you can get it that is This is a beast of a card but still extremely overpriced. If you don't use ray tracing, I would go with 6900XT.
Pros: I would have given this card absolutely highest marks, except, after about 22 days of use, on my first VR test, the card died, and windows fails to detect it. Again, until it failed, this card screams- Everything within reason I played on a 2080ti really felt that 30% increase. However.....
Cons: It died after 20~ days, on my first test of No Man's Sky in VR. Booting again, met with 'no signal' on my display. Swapped back to my 2080ti, tested the card, driver sweep, different pc, different card, different memory, this card is busted. So, I don't really have any cons aside from the fact it broke almost...not quite, a month if we're being nice, out of the box new.
Overall Review: I really don't know, I would not buy this line of card again out of superstition and just the sheer speed at which the card failed, again, luckily, juuust inside the newegg return window- which, leaves me feeling sus about this particular wave of cards, or, at least, this particular model of the 3080ti. My warranty only covers replacement, and I am currently waiting on Newegg to fulfill their obligation, but overall what a headache; If you can find a comparable card go with that instead, despite the EVGA name on this one.
Pros: Its a 3090 with half the VRAM
Cons: Very high price
Overall Review: Got this via Newegg Shuffle, and while its hard to justify a $1200 video card, theyre reselling for 2x MSRP on TheBay and elsewhere, so its the cheapest price youre going to find anywhere- do get it if you can. Its basically a 3090 with half the VRAM, and is definitely overkill for just gaming, unless youre wanting to crank up Cyberpunk settings to Ultra. Coming from a 2060 Super, I can say that its a day/night experience playing games above 1440p resolution with RT enabled- meaning the 2060 cant manage playable FPS, while the 3080 Ti rips through it like its nothing. In other games that arent heavy with FX, reflections, etc., you really wont notice a difference at all, as the 2060 Super handles those easily. Originally, I was going to turn around and resell it, but here I am playing Mass Effect : Legendary Edition on my new 3080 Ti, instead.
Pros: Lots of GPU computing power
Cons: - Pricey - Long format card might not fit your case - 3-fan design slightly louder - one annoyance: bootup video priority
Overall Review: This review is written after having the card installed for only a few days. When I won a chance to buy a 3080Ti in the newegg shuffle, I jumped at it, and no regrets, despite the steep price -- more than double what I paid for the 2070 card it is replacing. Before buying, be sure your computer case will acomodate such a long card, and you have enough power supply. Compared to the 2070, this card takes more power and more cooling -- hence the 3 fans and the longer card, and therefore more fan noise, but not to an annoying level. The increase in 3DMark scores is consistent with expectations. As this is a new model GPU, you'll have to upgrade your drivers, and it might be easier to do that *before* installing the card, but I didn't do the upgrades until afterwords, and didn't have any problems. I was pleasantly surprised that the necessary Ubuntu linux driver was already available, although from a ppa repository. One small annoyance I want to mention: video during bootup before the OS is loaded. I'm referring to the text displayed by the BIOS/UEFI firmware on startup (where you can hit DEL to get into the setup or some function key to get a boot menu) and the GRUB boot loader. I have a dual-boot system with both Windows and Ubuntu. Obviously it is absolutely essential that this text goes to my monitor. Before the upgrade, I had the monitor attached to the 2070 via HDMI cable, and also a Valve Index VR headset plugged into one of the Display Ports on the card. The GRUB default is to boot into Ubuntu, so if I want to boot into Windows to play VR games, I have to reboot and choose Windows on the GRUB menu. After swapping out the 2070 and swapping in this card, I was not getting the BIOS/UEFI/GRUB video on the monitor! (I assume it must have been going to the VR headset.) Now in my (limited!) experience, on some systems the BIOS/UEFI/GRUB video is displayed on *every* monitor connected to the computer (this seems to happen with AMD video cards) and on some systems this video is only displayed on *one* monitor (this seems to happen with NVIDIA graphics cards). This card has 3 DP outputs and 1 HDMI output. In my experience, the HDMI output has lowest priority on this card. If there is anything (monitor or VR headset or whatever) plugged into any of the DP outputs, the bootup video goes to the Display Port and the HDMI port has no signal. After an embarrassing length of time figuring out what was going on, the solution was to plug the monitor into a DP output that had higher priority than where the VR headset was plugged in. Fortunately, my monitor also has DP inputs, so I just had to replace the cable, not the whole monitor! It would be much, much better if the bootup video went to *every* monitor that was plugged in instead of just one, but I don't know if that's within NVIDIA & EVGA's power to do. I don't know enough about the UEFI process to say. If the bootup video can only go to one monitor, it would be better if the HDMI output was not the absolute last in priority, to give the users more flexibility. (On the 2070 card being replaced, the priority was DP;DP;HDMI;DP, with the monitor attached to HDMI and the VR headset attached to the DP with lower priority.)
Pros: This card is nice. Can play WOW in 4k at pretty much max settings. I have been wanting to upgrade my card for a while now but it was pretty much impossible to find one at a decent price for a while. I upgraded from my 1070ti. Well worth it.
Cons: It's big but it wasn't too big for my case, I have a full tower so had no problems there, so I wouldn't really say that was a con for me.
Overall Review: Happy with it overall.
Pros: 4k gaming! Never drops below 60 frames, and was not a DOA!
Cons: This card has a smaller heatsink than my wifes 3070 ti and it runs at 78C under full load. I know, should have looked at the product dimensions but the aorus reviews made me worried of a DOA
Overall Review: Probably works great for small form factor pc builds with AIO, but I was trying to go with high air flow, air cooled, quiet build. Now my fans run at max rpm just for my GPU. Plus side my CPU never gets above 40C due to all my case fans maxed out
Great card, but not so great for my build
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