The STRIX Gaming GTX 1080 8GB is ASUS' latest and greates single GPU graphics card, which comes with a factory OC, that pushes really hard on the new Pascal GP-104 chip. In combination with the vendor's DirectCU III cooler this might be silent yet very powerful solution for gamers wanting to push UHD at high levels of detail. We're certainly curious to find out what this beast can do.
Présentation
ASUS was amongst the first Nvidia add-in-card (AIC) partners that have
decided to introduce a custom GTX 1080 graphics card which is using NVIDIAs
latest and greatest GP104-400-A1 Pascal chip. For this graphics card, ASUS makes use of a custom PCB along side another updated version of their DirectCU cooler. On the backside of
the card, there is a good looking backplate. A quick glance at the specs
also reveals that this card ships factory overclocked.
Browsing the specifications of this card we find 2560 CUDA
cores, 160 TMUs and 64 ROPs. For comparison reasons, the GTX 980 featured 2048
CUDA cores, 128 TMUs and 64 ROPs. This means that, compared to the same model from the previous generation, there are significantly more CUDA cores, TMUs and ROPs.
Looking at clock speeds we find a base clock set to 1'784 MHz and the boost clock is at 1'936 MHz, whereas the NVIDIA reference cards runs at 1607MHz/1733MHz, therefore there is a very solid 11.7% factory overclock on the GPU.
As we already mentioned, ASUS decided to use a significant
factory-overclock on their new GTX 1080 STRIX. While the reference GTX 1080 is set to work at 1607 MHz for the base clock and 1733 MHz
for the GPU boost clock, the GTX 1080 STRIX runs at
1'784 MHz base clock and 1'936 MHz boost clock.
When it comes to memory clock speeds we see the memory running at default clock speeds which is 1251 MHz and effective 10008 MHz. Combine this with a 256 Bit memory
interface and you end up with a total of 320 Gigabyte of memory bandwidth.
Whereas the typical boost clock is set at 1'936 MHz, the maximum boost of 2'050 MHz
was achieved quite easily and the GTX 1080 STRIX held that clock most of
the load time due to the capable DirectCU III cooler as well as good TDP target
(nVidia's Boost technology being power-based and not temperature-based on this
card). At this point we also ran Furmark to see how high the card overclocks,
when the GPU is under maximum load. This way we can determine a worst case scenario
regarding maximum boost clock. With this card we see clocks speeds of 1'860 MHz
at 0.862v..
Spécifications
|
ASUS GTX 1080
STRIX Gaming |
ASUS GTX 1080
STRIX Gaming |
GeForce GTX 980Ti |
Chip |
GP104-400-A1 Pascal |
GP104-400-A1 Pascal |
GM200-310-A1 Maxwell |
Gravure |
16 nm |
16 nm |
28 nm |
Transistors |
7.20 Milliards |
7.20 Milliards |
8.00 Milliards |
Fréquence GPU |
1'784 MHz |
1'607 MHz |
1'000 MHz |
Fréquence GPU
Boost |
1'936 MHz |
1'733 MHz |
1'076 MHz |
Mémoire |
8'192 MB |
8'192 MB |
6'144 MB |
Fréquence Mémoire |
1'251 (10'008) MHz |
1'251 (10'008) MHz |
1'750 (7'000) MHz |
Bus
Mémoire |
256 Bit |
256 Bit |
384 Bit |
Bande Passante |
320 GB/s |
320 GB/s |
336'600 MB/s |
Shader Cores |
2'560 |
2'560 |
2'816 |
TMUs |
128 |
128 |
160 |
ROPs |
64 |
64 |
96 |
TDP |
180 Watt |
180 Watt |
250 Watt |
Type de PCB |
Custom |
Reference Design |
Reference Design |
Slots |
2 |
2 |
2 |
Système de
refroidissement |
DirectCU III |
NVIDIA Reference |
NVIDIA Reference |
Prix au
lancement |
$829 |
$699 |
$649 |