Conclusion
Running the card at stock clocks shows, that when we equipped it with the
EK-FC GTX780 DCII watercooler scores were on average 1 percent higher than with the
aircooler. This is actually already a hint, that the card is very close to
overheating even with the powerful DirectCU II aircooler and at stock clocks. The
smallest performance difference we found with Metro Last Light, where
the watercooled card was only 0.38 percent quicker. On the other
hand there is Bioshock: Infinite where we see that the watercooled card is no
less than 2.7 percent quicker.
Once we started overclocking the cards, we noticed that 1100 MHz on the GPU and
1850 MHz on the memory were maximum stable clocks to run the card aircooled with
the DirectCU II aircooler. In order to show there is quite some potential still
slumbering in the GTX 780 Ti cooler, when appropriately cooled, we overclocked the
card a little bit hihger. In this case we ran it at 1200 MHz GPU clocks and 1950 MHz memory clocks.
Let's discuss the results again now. In 3DMark Fire Strike Extreme we see the scores
increase by 4.3 percent in case of aircooling OC and 8.4 percent when it comes
to watercooling OC. This means there is a gap of more than 4 percent inbetween aircooling
and watercooling, which apparently comes from the higher overclocking of the
watercooled version.
Overall the aircooled version is able to gain 4 percent
performance with the overclocking and the watercooled variant got 7.6 percent
faster. One value that was especially interesting at this point was Battlefield
4. In this game the watercooled and overclocked cards gains no less than 9.6
percent, whereas the aircooled and overclocked card "only" gains 3 percent.
On another note we had a closer look at temperatures. There is actually nothing
much to say then the obvious. Even under full load and overclocked the
watercooled card didn't get hotter than 53°C, whereas the aircooled version ran
at 71°C.
Even though the GTX 780Ti doens't product as much heat as the R9 290X we had for
testing it appears, that even the GTX 780Ti combined with the powerful DirectCU II
cooler from ASUS is very close to overheating. If you put a watercooler on
top of this card, then you can basically unleash the full potential of this
chip. This becomes clear as soon as you start overclocking the card.
In our case it was possible to run the card stable even at 1200 MHz GPU clock,
whereas the maximum with the aircooler was at 1150 MHz. Overall we can say if
you go get yourself a high-end GTX 780Ti and you want to get the maximum out of
this card, then we'd recommend you to go for a custom watercooling loop and the
EK-FC GTX780 DCII is certainly doing a great job. Obviously if you do not own
any watercooling gear at all, this is going to cost you quite some money, but at
least you'd have to buy a new radiator and pump only once. If you buy an new
card in a few years you just need to buy a news waterblock. The EK-FC GTX780
DCII we've used for testing in this article is going to set you back
102.96 Euro.