Whether or not this interim card is specifically to compete with AMD’s recent Vega 56 is pure speculation, but here’s the low-down on the new graphics card. Read our GTX 1070 Ti review.
What specs will the GTX 1070 Ti have?
These are the highlights:
2432 CUDA cores1607MHz base clock1683MHz boost clock8GB GDDR5 memory8Gb/s memory throughput
Nvidia superfans will already know that this brings the core count of the 1070 Ti close to the GTX 1080, which has 2560 CUDA cores. And the base clock speed of 1607MHz is the same as the 1080, though the boost speed is the same as the 1070. The rumours were all true: the new card will have GDDR5 memory instead of GDDR5X – as with the GTX 1080 – and has a bandwidth of 8Gb/s, 3Gb/s slower than the 1080. It equates to 256GB/s throughput. And it will need just one eight-pin PCI-E power connector from your PC’s power supply.
How much will the 1070 Ti cost?
Quite a lot less than a GTX 1080. The Founder’s Edition costs £419 ($449.99, 469 Euros). The Vega 56 – the cheapest versions at any rate – currently cost around £460, so the 1070 Ti appears to be priced to undercut it by a decent margin.
When is the GTX 1070 Ti release date?
2 November 2017
The card will launch at the beginning of November, with the Founder’s Edition already available on pre-order from Nvidia direct. Cards from partners will also be available at £419, including from Asus, Gigabyte, MSI, Zotac and Palit. There will be ‘mini’ versions (shorter than the 10.5in reference card) which could make the 1070 Ti suitable for smaller cases, such as this one from Zotac:
GeForce GTX 1070 Ti: full specifications
<td4 Jim has been testing and reviewing products for over 20 years. His main beats include VPN services and antivirus. He also covers smart home tech, mesh Wi-Fi and electric bikes.