GV-N780GHZ-3GD its the same like GV-N780OC-3GD ?

RaulF

Senior member
Jan 18, 2008
844
1
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I believe the GHZ has a back plate. Plus the higher clock.

I would steer clear of Gigabyte cards, there's been a bad rash of them lately not being able to hold their factory set clock.
 

43st

Diamond Member
Nov 7, 2001
3,197
0
0
I believe the GHZ has a back plate. Plus the higher clock.

I would steer clear of Gigabyte cards, there's been a bad rash of them lately not being able to hold their factory set clock.

It was the GHZ edition 780ti cards that had the problem.
 

escrow4

Diamond Member
Feb 4, 2013
3,339
122
106
It was the GHZ edition 780ti cards that had the problem.

Oh? I have one and only Tomb Raider had a nasty tendency to crash with nvidia driver errors. Could be the card, could be the game, could be the drivers. Seeing as no other game gave me this issue I'm leaning towards it being a once off.
 

43st

Diamond Member
Nov 7, 2001
3,197
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Oh? I have one and only Tomb Raider had a nasty tendency to crash with nvidia driver errors. Could be the card, could be the game, could be the drivers. Seeing as no other game gave me this issue I'm leaning towards it being a once off.

Gigabyte 780ti crashing reference: overclock.net thead, geforce.com thread.
 

bigsnyder

Golden Member
Nov 4, 2004
1,568
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The vanilla 780s do not have the problem with stock clocks. The Ghz edition does indeed have the backplate.
 

Kayuu

Junior Member
Nov 28, 2014
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0
0
Sorry for bumping a topic already old but I have a simple question regarding these two cards. I have a GV-N780OC-3GD card installed on my computer. If I put a GV-N780GHZ-3GD with it, would I be able to do SLI properly? Or it would be desirable to have exactly the same card I already own? I say this because in my locality, currently it's easier and cheaper to get the GHZ edition.