poofyhairguy
Lifer
- Nov 20, 2005
- 14,612
- 318
- 126
You made out like a bandit if they're giving you a GTX 960 for a GTX 570. I own one right now, I at one time owned a GTX 670 and with new drivers favoring Maxwell its pulling ahead. I would estimate its about as fast as a GTX 680 now (and definitely faster than a GTX 760). I think you would be quite foolish to get rid of it when it cost you nothing for an R9 280X (which is not tremendously faster). If you're going to do an upgrade do it right, sell it and get a GTX 970. The 960 is quiet, cool running, low power usage and 35-40% faster than your GTX 570. I don't understand how you could be disappointed with that RMA upgrade.
Agreed, were I in EVGA's position, op would be getting a 750 ti instead.
You made out like a bandit if they're giving you a GTX 960 for a GTX 570. I own one right now, I at one time owned a GTX 670 and with new drivers favoring Maxwell its pulling ahead. I would estimate its about as fast as a GTX 680 now (and definitely faster than a GTX 760). I think you would be quite foolish to get rid of it when it cost you nothing for an R9 280X (which is not tremendously faster). If you're going to do an upgrade do it right, sell it and get a GTX 970. The 960 is quiet, cool running, low power usage and 35-40% faster than your GTX 570. I don't understand how you could be disappointed with that RMA upgrade.
A 7970 may be faster, but not by much. Unless you can make at least $40 off the deal, it is not worth it to switch. You will spend almost $40 in extra electricity over the course of two years by going with the AMD equivalent, assuming 6 hours a day of actually loading the card. (6*.12*0.07*365*2)
A 7970 may be faster, but not by much. Unless you can make at least $40 off the deal, it is not worth it to switch. You will spend almost $40 in extra electricity over the course of two years by going with the AMD equivalent, assuming 6 hours a day of actually loading the card. (6*.12*0.07*365*2)
^ Dang, that new Lightning card is stealing the show!
I haven't kept up on what game engines/games favor which company and which website charts are less biased. So is the most recent TPU charts good for a general performance check? How does the AT benches compare?In the latest TPU charts, once TPU removed heavily NV biased tests like ProjectNvidi, added an even faster Skylake CPU as the foundation to the test platform and the R9 280X is now smashing 960 by 27% at 1080P - more than ever. While it's debatable if the effort is worth switching to and from between these 2 cards (i.e., might as well step up to an R9 290/970/390 at that point), the 960 2GB continues to look worse and worse. 770 is also falling part with even the R9 380 now beating it. In general, NV's cards besides the GTX980Ti/Titan continue to age worse with time, a similar theme we've seen in the last 3 years.
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Nvidia's focus seems to be more on the efficiency side, do the job with as little silicone and power as possible. Utilizing as close to 100% as possible of their compute resources to achieve competitive performance has been Nvidia's goal for the past few years. Of course, if your GPU utilization is already 90-95% of it's full compute potential, driver optimizations won't get any more out of it as the compute simply isn't there. GPUs with lesser resources are easier to optimize for, and thus, lower end GPUs will peak out and fall behind more quickly.In the latest TPU charts, once TPU removed heavily NV biased tests like ProjectNvidi, added an even faster Skylake CPU as the foundation to the test platform and the R9 280X is now smashing 960 by 27% at 1080P - more than ever. While it's debatable if the effort is worth switching to and from between these 2 cards (i.e., might as well step up to an R9 290/970/390 at that point), the 960 2GB continues to look worse and worse. 770 is also falling part with even the R9 380 now beating it. In general, NV's cards besides the GTX980Ti/Titan continue to age worse with time, a similar theme we've seen in the last 3 years.
In the latest TPU charts, once TPU removed heavily NV biased tests like ProjectNvidi, added an even faster Skylake CPU as the foundation to the test platform and the R9 280X is now smashing 960 by 27% at 1080P - more than ever. While it's debatable if the effort is worth switching to and from between these 2 cards (i.e., might as well step up to an R9 290/970/390 at that point), the 960 2GB continues to look worse and worse. 770 is also falling part with even the R9 380 now beating it. In general, NV's cards besides the GTX980Ti/Titan continue to age worse with time, a similar theme we've seen in the last 3 years.
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Considering 270X is Pitcairn which is 3 or 4 years old, this is impressive indeed.Interesting chart. That one shows the R9 270X ahead of the GTX950, and almost butting heads with the GTX960. Amazing.
This is the best, non-limited production 980Ti on the market, bar none. If you want the best, you gotta pay, bro. There are only two other cards that are slightly better and more exclusive but are both limited edition:There's a ton of good 980Ti models that hit 1.5ghz even at TPU's testing of the Lightning. Paying $100 premium is ridiculous for no real gains. Sure its quiet, but so are other good custom cards. It doesn't actually OC better on air.
Pretty much this.it's the ONLY definitive card in NV's line-up that's hands down uncontested in all key metrics.
In the latest TPU charts, once TPU removed heavily NV biased tests like ProjectNvidi, added an even faster Skylake CPU as the foundation to the test platform and the R9 280X is now smashing 960 by 27% at 1080P - more than ever.
anyone who recommends a 960 is screwing people over asking for help in this forum.
my opinion is that is not an opinion, but a statement of fact.
so you are one of those screwing people over asking for help. got it. D:Sorry, that's not a fact, its just a lame generalization. Both the GTX 960 and R9 380 (same class/price point) fit the bill in a lot of instances. Do you own one? If you do have you had enough experience with other graphics cards both weaker and better to be able to make an educated judgment? If not you opinion is pretty much worthless since you're just regurgitating what you're read on the internet for the last year from people who again, don't own it but say it has to be worthless because its got a 128 bit bus width and sits between a GTX 760 and GTX 770 from the previous gen. I guess they felt it should have been much faster and it was a little overpriced at release, but what new card isn't to some extent? Now at $170 its a valid option.
One thing we can agree on is that the OP did fine with this RMA upgrade from a performance perspective. EVGA didn't screw him around.
