GeForce GTX 1080

With Pascal/GP104 particulars out of the way, let’s talk about the cards themselves. “The new king” as NVIDIA affectionately calls it will be the GTX 1080, and will be their new flagship card. NVIDIA is promoting it as having better performance than both GTX 980 SLI and GTX Titan X.  NVIDIA’s own performance marketing slides put the average at around 65% faster than GTX 980 and 20-25% faster than GTX Titan X/980 Ti, which is relatively consistent for a new NVIDIA GPU. Of course, real-world performance remains to be seen, and will vary from game to game.

NVIDIA GTX x80 Specification Comparison
  GTX 1080 GTX 1070 GTX 980 GTX 780
CUDA Cores 2560 (Fewer) 2048 2304
Texture Units 160? (How many?) 128 192
ROPs 64 (Good question) 64 48
Core Clock 1607MHz (Slower) 1126MHz 863MHz
Boost Clock 1733MHz (Again) 1216MHz 900Mhz
TFLOPs (FMA) 9 TFLOPs 6.5 TFLOPs 5 TFLOPs 4.1 TFLOPs
Memory Clock 10Gbps GDDR5X GDDR5 7Gbps GDDR5 6Gbps GDDR5
Memory Bus Width 256-bit ? 256-bit 256-bit
VRAM 8GB 8GB 4GB 3GB
FP64 ? ? 1/32 FP32 1/24 FP32
TDP 180W ? 165W 250W
GPU "GP104" "GP104" GM204 GK110
Transistor Count 7.2B 7.2B 5.2B 7.1B
Manufacturing Process TSMC 16nm TSMC 16nm TSMC 28nm TSMC 28nm
Launch Date 05/27/2016 06/10/2016 09/18/2014 05/23/2013
Launch Price MSRP: $599
Founders $699
MSRP:$379
Founders: $449
$549 $649

The GTX 1080 will ship with the most powerful GP104 implementation – we don’t yet have confirmation of whether it’s fully enabled – with 2560 of Pascal’s higher efficiency CUDA cores. And while I’m also awaiting confirmation of this as well, I believe it’s a very safe bet that the card will feature 160 texture units and 64 ROPs, given what is known about the architecture.

Along with Pascal’s architectural efficiency gains, the other big contributor to GTX 1080’s performance will come from its high clockspeed. The card will ship with a base clock of 1607MHz and a boost clock of 1733MHz. This is a significant 43% boost in operating frequency over GTX 980, and it will be interesting to hear how much of this is from the jump to 16nm and how much of this is from any kind of specific optimization to hit higher clockspeeds. Meanwhile NVIDIA is touting that GTX 1080 will be a solid overclocker, demoing it running at 2114MHz with its reference air cooler in their presentation.

GTX 1080 will be paired with 8GB of the new GDDR5X memory, on a 256-bit memory bus. The shift to GDDR5X allows NVIDIA to run GTX 1080 at 10Gbps/pin, giving the card a total of 320GB/sec of memory bandwidth. Interestingly, even with GDDRX5 this is still a bit less memory bandwidth than GTX 980 Ti (336GB/sec), a reminder that even with GDDR5X, memory bandwidth improvements continue to be outpaced by GPU throughput improvements, so memory bandwidth efficiency is always paramount.

I am admittedly a bit surprised that GTX 1080’s GDDR5X is only clocked at 10Gbps, and not something faster. Micron’s current chips are rated for up to 12Gbps, and the standard itself is meant to go up to 14Gbps. So I am curious over whether this is NVIDIA holding back so that they have some future headroom, whether this is a chip supply thing, or if perhaps GP104 simply can’t do 12Gbps at this time.  At the same time it will be interesting to see whether the fact that NVIDIA can currently only source GDDRX from a single supplier (Micron) has any impact, as GDDR5 was always multi-sourced. Micron for their part has previously announced that their GDDR5X production line wouldn’t reach volume production until the summer, which is a potential indicator that GDDR5X supplies will be limited.

On the power front, NVIDIA has given the GTX 1080 an 180W TDP rating. This is 15W higher than the GTX 980, so the GTX x80 line is drifting back up a bit in TDP, but overall NVIDIA is still trying to keep the GTX x80 lineup as mid-power cards, as this worked well for them with GTX 680/980. Meanwhile thanks to Pascal and 16nm this is much lower than GTX 980 Ti for higher performance. We’ll look at card design a bit more in a moment, but I do want to note that NVIDIA is using a single 8-pin PCIe power connector for this, as opposed to 2 6-pin connectors, and this is something that is becoming increasingly common.

Looking at the design of the card itself, the GTX 1080 retains a lot of the signature style of NVIDIA’s other high-end reference cards, however after using the same industrial design since the original GTX Titan in 2013, NVIDIA has rolled out a new industrial design for the GTX 1000 series. The new design is far more (tri)angular as opposed to the squared-off GTX Titan cooler. Otherwise limited information is available about this design and whether the change improves cooling/noise in some fashion, or if this is part of NVIDIA’s overall fascination with triangles. Though one thing that has not changed is size: this is a 10.5” double-wide card, the same as all of the cards that used the previous design.

Industrial design aside, NVIDIA confirmed that the GTX 1080 will come with a vapor chamber cooler; GTX 980 did not do this, as NVIDIA didn’t believe this was necessary on a 165W card. Given NVIDIA’s overclocking promises with this card, this likely has something to do with it, as a vapor chamber should prove very capable on a 180W card.

Meanwhile it looks like the DVI port will live to see another day. Other than upgrading the underlying display controller to support the newer iterations of the DisplayPort standard, NVIDIA has not changed the actual port configuration since GTX 980 Ti. So we’re looking at 3 DisplayPorts, 1 HDMI port, and one DL-DVI-D port. This does mean that built-in analog (VGA capabilities) are dead though, as NVIDIA has switched from DVI-I to the pure-digital DVI-D.

As mentioned elsewhere, the GTX 1080’s power input has evolved a bit over GTX 980. Rather than 2 6-pin connectors it’s now a single 8-pin connector to feed the 180W card. This is also the first card to feature NVIDIA’s SLI HB connectors, which will require new SLI bridges. Though at this point our concerns about the long-term suitability over AFR stand.

For pricing and availability, NVIDIA has announced that the card will be available on May 27th. There will be two versions of the card, the base/MSRP card at $599, and then a more expensive Founders Edition card at $699. At the base level this is a slight price increase over the GTX 980, which launched at $549. Information on the differences between these versions is limited, but based on NVIDIA’s press release it would appear that only the Founders Edition card will ship with NVIDIA’s full reference design, cooler and all. Meanwhile the base cards will feature custom designs from NVIDIA’s partners. NVIDIA’s press release was also very careful to only attach the May 27th launch date to the Founders Edition cards.

Consequently, at this point it’s unclear whether the $599 card will be available on the 27th. In previous generations all of the initial launch cards were full reference cards, and if that were the case here then all of the cards on launch day will be the $699 cards, but we are looking to get confirmation of this situation ASAP. Otherwise, I expect that the base cards will forgo the vapor chamber cooler and embrace the dual/triple fan open air coolers that most of NVIDIA’s partners use. Though with any luck these cards will use the reference PCB, at least for the early runs.

On a final observation, if the new NVIDIA reference design and cooler will only be available with the Founders Edition card, this means that customers who prefer the NVIDIA reference card will be seeing a greater de-facto price increase. In that case we’re looking at $699 versus $549 for a launch window reference GTX 980.

GTX 1070

 

NVIDIA GTX x70 Specification Comparison
  GTX 1070 GTX 970 GTX 770 GTX 670
CUDA Cores (Fewer than GTX 1080) 1664 1536 1344
Texture Units (How many?) 104 128 112
ROPs (Good question) 56 32 32
Core Clock (Slower) 1050MHz 1046MHz 915MHz
Boost Clock (Again) 1178MHz 1085MHz 9i80Mhz
TFLOPs (FMA) 6.5 TFLOPs 3.9 TFLOPs 3.3 TFLOPs 2.6 TFLOPs
Memory Clock ? GDDR5 7Gbps GDDR5 7Gbps GDDR5 6Gbps GDDR5
Memory Bus Width ? 256-bit 256-bit 256-bit
VRAM 8GB 4GB 2GB 2GB
FP64 ? 1/32 FP32 1/24 FP32 1/24 FP32
TDP ? 145W 230W 170W
GPU "GP104" GM204 GK104 GK104
Transistor Count 7.2B 5.2B 3.5B 3.5B
Manufacturing Process TSMC 16nm TSMC 28nm TSMC 28nm TSMC 28nm
Launch Date 06/10/2016 09/18/2014 05/30/2013 05/10/2012
Launch Price MSRP:$379
Founders: $449
$329 $399 $399

Finally, below the GTX 1080 we have its cheaper sibling, the GTX 1070. Information on this card is more limited. We know it’s rated for 6.5 TFLOPs – 2.5 TFLOPs (28%) slower than GTX 1080 – but NVIDIA has not published specific CUDA core counts or GPU clockspeeds. Looking just at rated TFLOPs, at 72% of the rated performance of the GTX 1080, the gap between the GTX 1070 and GTX 1080 is a bit wider than it was for the GTX 900 series. There the GTX 970 was rated for 79% of the GTX 980’s performance.

On the memory front, the card will be paired with more common GDDR5. Like the GTX 1080 there’s 8GB of VRAM, but specific clockspeeds are unknown at this time. Also unknown is the card’s TDP, though lower than GTX 1080 is a safe assumption.

Like GTX 1080, GTX 1070 will be offered in a base/MSRP version and a Founders Edition version. These will be $379 and $449 respectively – $50 over the GTX 970’s launch price of $329 – with the Founders Edition card employing the new NVIDIA industrial design. I’ll also quickly note that it remains to be seen whether the industrial design reuse will include GTX 1080’s vapor chamber, or if NVIDIA will swap out the cooling apparatus under the hood.

The GTX 1070 will be the latter of the two new Pascal cards, hitting the streets on June 10th. Like the GTX 1080, NVIDIA’s press release is very careful to only attach that date to the Founders Edition version, so we’re still waiting on confirmation over whether the base card will be available on the 10th as well.

GTX 1000 Series Announced: Pascal and "GP104"
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  • Kutark - Thursday, May 12, 2016 - link

    I honestly don't see that as an issue in this market. AMD buyers have already shown they really don't care about power usage when they will buy cards that had 70-90w higher TDP than the equivalent NVidia offering. I've made lots of arguments that the price/perf savings over an NVidia card was not borne out over the 2-3 year life cycle of a card when you factor in the electricity savings.

    However, a lot of kids and people aren't paying their own electrical bills anyways, so it's kind of 6 of one half a dozen of the other to them.

    Point being, power efficiency is generally not on the list of most people's concerns when buying a discrete graphics card. Price/perf is typically the main metric (with a little bit of fanboyism thrown in for good measure).
  • medi03 - Thursday, May 12, 2016 - link

    Equivalent... what "equivalent"?
    AMD cards consuming extra 70w watts are also roughly 10% faster than similarly priced nVidia cards.
  • beck2050 - Monday, May 9, 2016 - link

    Excited to see your actual reviews!
  • AnnonymousCoward - Monday, May 9, 2016 - link

    Why does NVIDIA always use a leaf blower for the reference fan? Dual exposed fans above a flat heatsink are proven to be much quieter and cooler.
  • Rayb - Monday, May 9, 2016 - link

    Can you say "Vapor Chamber Cooler" and understand its meaning. Obviously, this is a reference board and cooling solution from NVIDIA not a custom design from other OEMs.
  • TheinsanegamerN - Thursday, May 12, 2016 - link

    and are terrible for small cases or multiGPU, as they just cycle heat around. XFX fixed the blower fan for the 390x, we'll see if nvidia fixed the blower cooler this time around.
  • oranos - Monday, May 9, 2016 - link

    going to be the easiest $600 ive ever spent
  • cactusdog - Monday, May 9, 2016 - link

    These cards wont be "$599 and $379 respectively". This is a strange launch, There is a lot of sneaky marketing and PR by Nvidia and confusion. The "Founders Edition" is actually the bog standard reference card. They are $699 not $599, the 1070 wont be $379, but $479 on release. With availability issues, the 1080 will be more like $749-$799 on release. The cheaper price of $599 is for AIB partners, non-reference they can make versions of the 1080 for $599 but most wont be sold at that price. The real prices changes the perception of the cards, its not as attractive, and with the only benchmark showing the 1080 performing slower than a 980Ti, it seems Nvidia's hype and marketing doesnt match reality.
  • santz - Tuesday, May 10, 2016 - link

    i believe you, cant wait AMD to launch their high end Polaris cards as I also believe that only true competition will make the prices reflect what average consumers can spend. All this sneaky stuff being pulled by PR may just backfire .. hmmm time will tell
  • medi03 - Thursday, May 12, 2016 - link

    Well, that might come in Oct the earliest.
    From what I got, what we'll get will be 470 and 480 cards.
    With 480 being roughly on 390x levels (not bad at all for 200$-ish card though).

    It's not even clear if there will be 490 based on Polaris.
    First (smaller) Vega, allegedly, comes in Oct though.

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