Meet The GTX 560 Ti

As we mentioned previously, GF114 is so similar to GF104 that it’s even pin compatible, leading to a number of NVIDIA’s partners simply reusing their GTX 460 designs. So long as you can provide the extra 10W and handle the extra heat, a GTX 460 design is 1 GF114 away from being a GTX 560 Ti. And while we’re going to see a number of familiar designs from NVIDIA’s partners, that hasn’t stopped NVIDIA from going back to the drawing table for the GTX 560 Ti’s reference design. As a result while the reference card is similar to the GTX 460 reference card, it has also clearly been enhanced to not just handle the slightly higher power requirements but to go above and beyond.


Top: GTX 560 Ti. Bottom: GTX 460 1GB

Since so much of this article is based on comparisons to the GTX 460, let’s start there. GTX 460 was an 8.25” long card with a center-mounted fan using a half-enclosed shroud, sitting on top of a slightly odd dual-heatpipe heatsink. By using a center-mounted fan, NVIDIA went with a design that recirculates some air in the case of the computer instead of a blower that fully exhausts all hot air. The advantage of the recirculating design is that it’s quieter than a blower, but the cost is that it’s more reliant on case ventilation. In a well-ventilated case like our Thermaltake Spedo, this worked out well to the GTX 460’s advantage, resulting in a very cool, very quiet card. In fact the only real problem we encountered with NVIDIA’s design was on the similarly designed GTS 450, where were discovered the downside to the fact that the PCB wasn’t securely mounted to the shroud on all corners.

For the GTX 560 Ti, NVIDIA has taken this same basic design and has effectively built it bigger. Overall the GTX 560 Ti is now bigger, measuring a full 9” long. This looks to be a result of both a larger heatsink, and of additional components laid out on the PCB (presumably to meet the higher power requirements). Anchoring that 9” PCB is a baseplate, nearly identical in style to the one we see on the GTX 580 and GTX 570. As a simple metal plate the baseplate provides some heatsink capacity for any small components it sits over (e.g. MOSFETs) but it also provides mount points for OEM computers that further bolt down their video cards, and it provides structural stability to the now longer card; the GTX 560 Ti won’t bend, and trust me I’ve tried.

Cooling is being provided by a heatsink & fan combination similar to the GTX 460. Like everything else about the card this has been scaled up a bit to meet the higher power requirements, with a slightly longer heatsink attached to the GPU using 3 copper heatpipes. Sitting over this is an equally similar partially open shroud which directs air out the front and the rear of the card.  For lack of better wording the shroud is slightly more enclosed on the GTX 560 Ti than the GTX 460, so we suspect at least a trivial amount of additional hot air gets exhausted towards the front of the card outside of the case, as opposed to on the GTX 460. Finally the shorud is once more concave, resulting in the 80mm fan sticking up above the shroud slightly for better airflow.

Looking at the bare PCB, as was the case with the GF104 GPU, GF114 is capped with a metal heatspreader. Meanwhile the memory on our sample is 5Gbps Samsung GDDR5, which is rated well beyond the 4004MHz the card ships as. As we’ve mentioned before the limitation becomes the memory controller and the memory bus, long before it becomes the GDDR5 memory itself. Providing power for all of this is a pair of 6pin PCIe power sockets, which are located on the rear of the card. We’re not fans of rear mounted plugs, particularly on longer cards. We would have liked to see NVIDIA rotate them upwards given the GTX 560 Ti’s extended length.

GF114, A1

Meanwhile display connectivity remains unchanged from the rest of the GTX 400/500 series. NVIDIA provides 2 dual-link DVI ports and a mini-HDMI port; however only 2 displays can be driven by a single card. Through SLI a second card can be hooked up to drive a 3rd and 4th display, necessary among other things for NVIDIA/3D Vision Surround. As with the GTX 460, a single SLI connector is provided, allowing 2-way SLI.

Overall while the GTX 560 Ti isn’t necessarily overbuilt, it’s certainly more than we were expecting for just a 10W increase in power consumption. Whether NVIDIA actually needed a card like this or if they have a specific goal in mind we’re unsure, but it’s quite a bit more complex a card than the GTX 460. No doubt this drives part of the GTX 560 Ti’s higher price, but given that NVIDIA’s partners can sell GTX 460 1GBs for nearly $100 less, there’s probably a good profit to be had with this card even with its additional complexity. Or to put things another way, even with the additional complexity we suspect NVIDIA has plenty of room to lower prices as the competitive market dictates.

If you’ve made it this far then no doubt the name has caught your attention. NVIDIA’s product naming has been complex (if not exploitive) lately, and GTX 560 Ti doesn’t change that. Unlike GF100 to GF110, GF104 to GF114 brings with it absolutely no architectural changes whatsoever. Thus GTX 560 is nothing more than a GTX 460 with more functional units and a higher clockspeed based on a tweaked chip ; hardly deserving of a whole new generation in name. But we knew this was coming the moment we saw the GTX 580, so here we are.

Furthermore NVIDIA’s affinity for long names continues to grow at roughly the same pace as the length of their product names.  Due to NVIDIA’s disabling of ROPs on the GTX 460 the memory size was an unofficial suffix, as cards with 768MB would have fewer ROPs and less memory bandwidth, leading to performance even lower than what the missing 256MB on its own would lead to. The good news is that NVIDIA has improved on this by ditching the memory suffixes (memory size is no longer used to indicate the number of ROPs), while the bad news is that suffixes are here to stay.

While NVIDIA had used suffixes for a long time, starting with the 200 series however suffixes became the prefix, leading to GTX 285, GTS 250, GT 430, etc. After a two and a half year break from suffixes, they’re back. In a rather transparent attempt to capture the goodwill and fame of the company’s GeForce 3 Ti and GeForce 4 Ti products, NVIDIA is resurrecting the Ti suffix for the GTX 560 Ti. At this point in time it doesn’t mean anything, but if the GTX 460 is anything to go by, at some point we’d expect to see a lower-end GeForce GTX 560 <insert suffix here> to flesh out NVIDIA’s lineup. It goes without saying that we’d rather just have model numbers that clearly denote the performance ranking of cards, e.g. GTX 560, GTX 555, etc, but then we’re hardware enthusiasts and not marketing directors.

The GF104/GF110 Refresher: Different Architecture & Different Transistors The Test
Comments Locked

87 Comments

View All Comments

  • SolMiester - Wednesday, January 26, 2011 - link

    Hi can we please have some benchies on this feature please...While surround is not an option for the single nVidia card, 3D is, and it is hard to judge performance with this enabled. Readers need to know if 3D is an viable option with this card at perhaps 16x10 or 19x10

    Ta
  • DarknRahl - Wednesday, January 26, 2011 - link

    I agree with some of the other comments and find the conclusion rather odd. I didn't really get why all the comparison's were done with the 460 either, yes this is the replacement card for the 460 but isn't really to relevant as far a purchasing decision goes at this moment in time. I found HardOCP's review far more informative, especially as they get down to brass tacs; the price to performance. In both instances the 560 doesn't make too much sense.

    I still enjoy reading your reviews of other products, particularly power supplies and CPUs.
  • kallogan - Thursday, January 27, 2011 - link

    Put those damn power connectors at the top of the graphic card, think about mini-itx users !!! Though this one is 9 inches, should fit in my sugo sg05 anyway.
  • neo_moco - Thursday, January 27, 2011 - link

    I really don`t understand the conclusion :

    The radeon 6950 wins hands down in 1920x and 2560x in almost all important games: crysis , metro , bad company2, mass effect 2 and wolfenstein

    The geforce wins only the games who not a lot of people play : civ 5 , battleforge, hawx , dirt 2

    Add to that others tests : 6950 wins in the popular call of duty , vantage .
    In 3dmark 11 the geforce is 15 % weaker(guru3d) so the conclusion as i see it : radeon 6950 1 gb is aprox. 5-10 % better and not the other way .
  • neo_moco - Thursday, January 27, 2011 - link

    after 15 months of the radeon 5850 launch we get a card 10 % better for the same price; i dont get the enthusiasm of some people over this cards ; its kind of lame
  • HangFire - Thursday, January 27, 2011 - link

    "By using a center-mounted fan, NVIDIA went with a design that recirculates some air in the case of the computer instead of a blower that fully exhausts all hot air."

    I don't think I've ever seen a middle or high end NVIDIA card that fully exhausted all hot air. Maybe it exists, I certainly haven't owned them all, perhaps in the customized AIB vendor pantheon there have been a few.

    This is not just a nitpick. When swapping out an 8800GT to an 8800 Ultra a few years back, I thought I was taking a step forwards in case temperatures, because the single-slot GT was internally vented and the Ultra had that second slot vent. I didn't notice the little gap, or the little slots in the reference cooler shroud.

    That swap began a comical few months of debugging and massive case ventilation upgrades. Not just the Ultra got hot, everything in that case got hot. Adding a second 120mm input fan and another exhaust, an across-the-PCI-slots 92mm fan finally got things under control (no side panel vent). Dropping it into a real gamer case later was even better. (No, I didn't pay $800 for the Ultra, either).

    I'm not a fan of, um, graphics card fans that blow in two directions at once, I call them hard drive cookers, and they can introduce some real challenges in managing case flow. But I no longer run under the assumption that a rear-venting double slot cooler is necessarily better.

    I'd like to see some case-cooker and noise testing with the new GTX 560 Ti reference, some AIB variants, and similar wattage rear venting cards. In particular, I'd like to see what temps a hard drive forward of the card endures, above, along, and below.
  • WRH - Saturday, January 29, 2011 - link

    I know that comparing an on CPU chip graphics with GPU cards like the ones on this list would be like comparing a Prius to a Ferrari but I would like to see the test results just the same. Sandy Bridge on CPU GPUs come in two models (2000 and 3000). It would be interesting to see just how far below the Radeon HD4870 they are and see how the 2000 and 3000 compare.

Log in

Don't have an account? Sign up now