That's still pretty impressive. Mine runs completely stable at 7ghz but I've never tried pushing it further.
You have anything relevant to add to the thread, or are you just bored, and have diarrhea of the mouth? I thought it would be cool to have a thread for people to discuss their experience with the 770, since there was one for the 780. Anything wrong with that?
Funny thing is that the actual boost clock of my card is 1084 (1MHz less than the 680 2.0). So nonsense? Not really :thumbup:
Well seeing as the 770 IS the 680 with binned memory and a new BIOS I don't see how it's not acceptable that current "770" owners share their experience with their cards they have had for a year now:infinity: (although they did pay more for their cards).:banana:
Sorry, while the 770 may be a 680 in most respects, there are obviously differences. And TK is not sharing any "experience." He's trying to be funny....with emphasis on trying.
Yes I did pay more for my card when I bought it at launch. But I've been enjoying GTX770 performance for over a year now. Makes the extra €100 totally worthwhile.
Close to 770 performance. Sure, you overclock the 680 to stock 770 performance. But then the 770 can be oc'd, of course. And on and on we go.
Just think of it as a price drop. I am curious if you can flash the real 770 BIOS on the 680 and unlock GPU boost2.0 for the 680 maybe Slam can upload his and you or ---TK--- can try it out that way when the 760ti comes out I may do the same. Have you gotten yours yet I would like to see how high it goes. Also I wonder if Nvidia unlocked the voltage to 1.21V.
Not yet brother. Waiting on delivery. I know it's not going to be a big jump from my 670 FTW. I just wanted a faster new toy, and didn't want to spend $650 on the 780. Call me stupid, but I'm just having some fun.
gk104 has been out for a very long time. nvidia didnt even change the gpu code name. it is still gk104 it be a 770 or a 680. the only thing thats different is gpu boost 2.0 and a 7ghz standard memory clock.
Yes but let's be fair, it doesn't take much of an overclock for a 680 to match stock 770 performance.