Trending:

Nvidia's GeForce GTX 1060 appears to thrash AMD's 480, but at a price

tech2 News Staff July 6, 2016, 19:27:03 IST

Leaks of what appear to be benchmarks of Nvidia’s as yet unannounced GeForce GTX 1060 have appeared online.

Advertisement
Nvidia's GeForce GTX 1060 appears to thrash AMD's 480, but at a price

The battle for VR has been raging since the first specifications for the Oculus Rift were announced. Both AMD and Nvidia, the only companies making graphics cards today, have offerings that claim to bring VR to the masses. So far, Nvidia’s been at the helm. It’s 970 and 980 GPUs were great, but the recently unveiled 1080 and 1070 simply smoke the competition away. In an attempt to sway things their way, AMD switched to a new microarchitecture (finally) and released the R9 480. The 480 offered something that Nvidia didn’t, a relatively budget-friendly offering that could match the best from Nvidia. In crossfire at least. The current king-of-the-hill in the GPU space is the Nvidia GTX1080 and it retails for a hefty $499 (though it’s ridiculously priced at Rs 64,000 in India). AMD’s 480 was priced at $200 (starting at Rs 22,000 in India) and AMD claimed that two of them would beat the 1080 with ease, making the AMD 480 the best value-for-money offerings around. It even seemed like AMD would get away with it, until now. Leaks of what appear to be an Nvidia 1060 have appeared online. The 1060, going by Nvidia’s naming conventions, is a mainstream card. Rumours put the price at $250, which is about 25 percent higher than that of the 480. These leaks however indicate that the 1060 trumps the 480 by about 15 percent. Coupled with support for Nvidia’s Ansel, Simultaneous Multi-Projection and other such features, does that mean that, once again, AMD has been relegated to the also-rans? If the benchmarks are true, the answer is most probably a yes. The Nvidia 1080 is a beast and two AMD 480s might beat it, but dual-GPU support has always been far from perfect and it’s simply more efficient to have a single GPU do the job of two separate GPUs. Squash any plans of pairing two 1060s in SLI though. It appears that the 1060 and cards of its ilk will not support SLI. Courtesy of WCCFTech , here’s what we know of the Nvidia 1060’s specifications:

Graphics CardNvidia GeForce GTX 1060Nvidia GeForce GTX 1070Nvidia GeForce GTX 1080
Graphics CoreGP106GP104GP104
Process Node16nm FinFET16nm FinFET16nm FinFET
TransistorsTBD7.2 Billion7.2 Billion
CUDA Cores1280 CUDA Cores1920 CUDA Cores2560 CUDA Cores
Base Clock1506 MHz1506 MHz1607 MHz
Boost Clock1708 MHz1683 MHz1733 MHz
FP32 ComputeTBD6.5 TFLOPs9.0 TFLOPs
VRAM6GB GDDR58GB GDDR58GB GDDR5X
Bus Interface192-bit bus256-bit bus256-bit bus
Power ConnectorSingle 6-Pin PowerSingle 8-Pin PowerSingle 8-Pin Power
TDP120W150W180W
Display Outputs3x Display Port 1.43x Display Port 1.43x Display Port 1.4
1x HDMI 2.0b1x HDMI 2.0b1x HDMI 2.0b
1x DVI1x DVI1x DVI
Launch Date13th July 201610th June 201627th May 2016
Launch Price$250 US$379 US$599 US
Home Video Shorts Live TV