Buy selected Geforce RTX and get 4 Games w/ purchase, limited offer
24GB
384-Bit
GDDR6X
PCI Express 4.0
1905 MHz
850W
Brand | GIGABYTE |
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Series | Gaming |
Model | GV-N309TGAMING OC-24GD |
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 3090 Ti |
Core Clock | 1905 MHz |
CUDA Cores | 10752 |
Effective Memory Clock | 21000 MHz |
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Memory Size | 24GB |
Memory Interface | 384-Bit |
Memory Type | GDDR6X |
DirectX | DirectX 12 Ultimate |
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OpenGL | OpenGL 4.6 |
Multi-Monitor Support | 4 |
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HDMI | 1 x HDMI 2.1 |
DisplayPort | 3 x DisplayPort 1.4a |
Max Resolution | 7680 x 4320 |
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Virtual Reality Ready | Yes |
Cooler | WINDFORCE 3X |
Recommended PSU Wattage | 850W |
Power Connector | 1 x 16-Pin |
Form Factor | ATX |
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Max GPU Length | 331 mm |
Card Dimensions (L x H) | 13.03" x 5.91" |
Slot Width | 3.5 slot |
Package Contents | Accessory 12-pin power cable VGA holder |
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Date First Available | March 29, 2022 |
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Pros: No RGB
Cons: 4 slots
Overall Review: Upgrade from 2080 ti and Ill wait for the 5090 ti
Pros: No fanfare: No lighting and all black constructions looks like it means business Great performance: runs my games at Ultrawide 3440 x 1440 100hz + older titles (e.g. Witcher 3) upscaled to 5160 x 2160 easily Noise: Despite its size, it's actually much quieter than expected and maintains good component temps
Cons: Heat: While the card maintains good temps, there is considerable heat generated. Adequate ventilation is a must Power Draw: My average power draw during use hovers around 430 watts Value: We all know this is a meme SKU
Overall Review: This card is certainly amazing. It's an enormous product around 2.5 inches in width and 13 inches in length. It just manages to fit in my ancient Corsair 300r case and takes up 3.5 slots. I play games on a 3440 x 1440 ultrawide monitor at 100 hz. It easily achieves the 100 hz threshold on most games. More graphically intense games with ray tracing run great especially in conjunction with DLSS enabled. I can even upscale classically taxing older games like Witcher 3 to 5160 x 2160 and hit the same threshold no problem. Most importantly for my needs, 1% low dips are nearly imperceptible in every game I've played, which has been a novel experience for me. As stated, the cons include the heat and power draw. This thing sloughs off heat like crazy. You need to have adequate ventilation to move the heat through your system. Power draw also reads around 430w average for me. Power spikes have also been reported, and while NVidia recommends an 850w PSU, I went with a 1000w one for good measure. All in all this card has checked all the boxes for me. Big and beefy.
Pros: Obviously Fast Great Temps Minimal noise Includes support bracket for gpu sag Includes 3x 8-pin to 12-pin adapter
Cons: Boxy Cooler Less attractive than other 3090ti (personal opinion) Must have good case airflow. This card puts out a lot of heat to keep its core temp down.
Overall Review: This card is a beast. Extremely power hungry. But you already know that if youre here. So lets talk about the things you actually want to hear. With less than ideal airflow (temporary case) this card can boost from factory to 2040MHz at a consistent 72C after 30 minutes of stress testing. This card did spike to a max wattage of 491.9W according to afterburner but would sit consistent around 460W - 470W. In less demanding games the card will de-clock itself and run cool and quiet. Even in more demanding games it is still difficult to hear over normal case fans. I do cap my frames at my monitors refresh rate (3440x1440 120hz) so I never reach this cards full potential unless Im playing more competitive games that require higher frames. If you pair this card with a top of the line cpu and a 1000w+ power supply you will not be disappointed. If you see this card on sale and have the extra money for it, buy it.
Pros: - very powerful GPU that can run some big AI training jobs. - working perfectly, nice and quiet - gets a 3DMark Port Royal score of 14561 which is better than 97% of all tests reported.
Cons: - had to find a 3rd 8-pin PCIe cable that was the right kind for my power supply (which is corsair) in order for it to work. Initially, I tried the wrong cable for a different power supply and it didn't work, machine would not boot, fortunately, that did no damage, so kudos to gigabyte for getting that right. - a bit noisy when running 3DMark Port Royal test, my iPhone recorded about 50db with all fans finning high. - not cheap of course.
Overall Review: - If you can afford it, go for it, it will not disappoint.
Pros: Like the regular 3090, you are covered for HD texture packs and 4k gaming for a while as far as vram is concerned. Runs cool topping at about 70c under load. While this has the ability to call in all 480 watts TDP it doesnt crank away using that kind of power on every game. Sure at 4k max settings and an unlocked frame rate it sure will. For RTS or casual games like rocket league you can limit the fps and save your electricity bill. The size of this thing, the happiness finally getting it installed and powered up, you feel like a bada.. its just straight up impressive. Can be had for the price of a 3090 but with this you get excellent cooling, an anti sag support, and full command of your neighborhoods power grid. (Kidding). Pure speculation here but this will probably be in line with the 4080. There are always initial shortages with any GPU launch even in good times. Theyre also going to resold and scalped sky high. Rather than go through that stress, this card is probably worth the buy. The performance is still excellent and youre most likely going to not say I wish I waited for a 4080 that maybe has a 10-15% improvement for $1700 then scalped for $3000. Nvidia knows how much these cards are worth for those who want their hands on them. Take with grain of salt.
Cons: Honestly this card is Im sure barely better than a 3090. But its awesome to be like I got a 3090 Ti for $1500. You probably need a 1000 watt PSU to deal with any power spikes if youre running a latest high-end CPU. You need a larger case (Im using the Corsair 4000 airflow) to be sure this card has room (under the 3 slots it takes up) to breathe. You may also need to optimize/upgrade your cooling because while the temps are good on the card, it is still dissipating all of the heat to maintain the lower 70c and below temps. The 4000 series is right around the corner. If youre lucky enough to get one, afford oneetc Im sure the 4080 is going to match this. For how much $$$ is the question and if they make them $999 then the 3090 Ti turned into a $500 premium for 24GB of memory and a higher electric bill.
Overall Review: With this card on sale, I took the dive. Building a 12th gen i7 PC I quickly found a 1300 watt PSU to power all of this nonsense. I play at 4k on a an LG C1 and while there are games like Cyberpunk that can still bring this card into the high 30s with the game entirely maxed out, it just takes minor adjustments and dlss if available, to get most games easily into the 120fps range. I also wanted to have the headroom on vram to enable me to hold onto this until the next generational leap like the 3000 series was. So is it worth it? Uhhhh thats still a hard question to answer. If you can put the money into supporting this card with complementary hardware and can reasonably assume you wont upgrade for a long while.or if you just have the money and the end goal here is to run 4k then sure its a great card for the long haul. Anything less, I really dont think its worth going past a 3080 12GB/ 3080 TI. Under 4k gaming this card is really really pointless.
Overall Review: it good but only time will tell for how long
Overall Review: BEAST MODE VIDEO
Pros: It's TOP of the line and loads games fast! Fits perfectly in the ASUS ROG X570 Crosshair VIII Hero (Wi-Fi) ATX Motherboard with PCIe 4.0 3 fans keeps it cool.
Cons: 1- Big and Bulky. Better have the right size Case for this to fit. Takes 3 slots up. 2- Power Hungry, needs at least a 80+ Gold 1000 watt P/S, suggest modular. 3- The fan plastic housing might need to be trimmed to fit into the PCIe slot, some Mother boards (example) MSI Gaming Edge Wi-Fi the card would not fit so I had to trim out a section of the plastic fan housing or it would simply not plug in. I know, risky on a high cost card. 4- Heavy so it does not feel as secure in the PCIe slot.
Overall Review: Do your research before buying this card. It's a great card and I do recommend it. But, I would just warn anyone that this card is ridiculously long and picky for fitting into just any Motherboard. Again make sure your power supply can handle this card or the system will not boot, so do not think the card is defective because you did not do your homework on having enough power for it.
Pros: My GTX 1080 Ti was about five years old, I used it all day every day, and graphics cards are said to have a lifetime of 3-5 years. I had a financial opportunity to get a good one, and I needed a powerhouse of a GPU for business purposes. This one has over 10k CUDA cores and 24 GB of high-speed RAM. I have the recommended power supply, so I got it. It barely fit, but I got it in.
Cons: I've mostly gotten used to the cyclical fan cooler noise and I had to remove my ethernet upgrade 10 Gbps PCIe card to fit this one in.
Overall Review: I'm overall satisfied. Things could have gone a lot worse. I never thought I'd spend this much money on a graphics card and be satisfied with my purchase, but here I am.
Overall Review: Buy if you got the money to blow, if not get a 3080/3080ti