Nvidia GTX Titan X 3DMark performance revealed

With a bit more specifications

While we wait for Nvidia to officially reveal more details regarding the new Geforce GTX Titan X at its upcoming GPU Technology Conference 2015 we now have some of the first rumored 3DMark performance results as well as some early details regarding GPU and memory clocks.

In case you missed it earlier, Nvidia's CEO Jen-Hsun Huang unveiled the new GTX Titan X during Epic Games press conference at Game Developers Conference 2015 and promised that we will hear more details during Nvidia's upcoming GPU Technology Conference 2015 scheduled for March 17th. Huang also revealed some details regarding the new Titan X, including that the GPU packs 8 billion transistors and that it will come with 12GB of memory.




Today, we have a bit more early details regarding both the performance in 3DMark as well as actual clocks of the GTX Titan X, courtesy of Videocardz.com. The GTX Titan is based on Nvidia's 28nm GM200 Maxwell GPU and should pack 3072 CUDA cores, 192 TMUs and 96 ROPs, at least according to rumors. Today, these rumors also include 1002MHz GPU base clock and 1750MHz clock (7.0GHz effective) for 12GB of GDDR5 memory paired up with a 384-bit memory interface.

In addition to these information, Videocarz.com also managed to get some of the first alleged 3DMark performance details for the Titan X, including 2-way, 3-way and 4-way SLI. According to these early tests, the new GTX Titan X gets quite close to dual-GPU Titan Z and Radeon R9 295X2 and is significantly faster than a factory-overclocked GTX 980 graphics cards. You can check out more details in slides below, while more slides can be found at Videocardz.com site via link below.

According to early details, GTX Titan X should cost US $999, which is the same price as earlier released Nvidia Titan graphics cards, but you should take all these informations with a grain of salt, as after all, these are just still rumors.







Source: Videocardz.com.


News by Luca Rocchi and Marc Büchel - German Translation by Paul Görnhardt - Italian Translation by Francesco Daghini


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