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Friday 5 February 2016

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Asus GeForce GTX 980 Ti Strix Review and Specifications

 Asus Strix GTX 980 Ti
Generally I start a review with a brief introduction about the brand of whose product I'm reviewing at that moment but this is not just a general review! Today Asus India was generous enough to send me over a graphics card for review and its not just any other card we are talking about, today we review the son of an owl Asus Strix GTX 980ti 6GB DDR5 graphics card.
The GTX 980ti was launched earlier last year but that's the reference model, it was only later in 2015 that Asus rolled out their much anticipated Strix GTX 980ti and the reason for the anticipation is quite simple....Its arguably one of the best GTX 980ti out there until date.
Asus Strix GTX 980 Ti

Before we start off a few points are worth noticing, the GTX 980ti at its heart has the same GM200 Maxwell GPU that powers its big brother the coveted GeForce Titan X but obviously has some corners trimmed off to save cost but that doesn't make the card any lesser in terms of real world and gaming performance. Asus over here has tweaked the Strix GTX 980ti with 1216Mhz base and 1317Mhz boost clock speeds which are not only substantially higher than the reference model's 1000/1075Mhz but are also the highest out of the box clock speeds that we've seen on any card till date. To seal the deal Asus even has bumped the massive 6GB DDR5 memory on this beast to 1800Mhz (7200Mhz effective) which is a 50Mhz increase but makes a world of difference in reality if not on paper.

Packing and Closer Look

Asus Strix GTX 980 Ti

The Asus GeForce GTX 980 Ti comes in the traditional Strix packing with the terminator like Strix owl occupying most of the real estate on the front. The Strix Gaming logo and GeForce GTX 980 Ti are clearly mentioned on one side of the box and some key features such as the 0dB gaming etc on the bottom end.
Asus Strix GTX 980 Ti

Opening the box you'll find a generous amount of accessories since its a graphics card after all. The big black box inside contains the GTX 980 Ti seated carefully inside a thick foam depression protected by an anti-static bag. Other accessories include the installation DVD with the GPU Tweak II software and drivers, a 2 x 6-pin to 8-pin power adapter, Strix product catalog, user’s manual, and a super hip Strix sticker you can slap on your case!
Asus Strix GTX 980 Ti

Take a good look at this beast of a beauty! The Strix GTX 980 Ti comes with the latest DirectCU III cooler from Asus which is exclusive for some very specific cards right now. The Asus Strix Radeon R9 390X 8GB DDR5 which we reviewed a few months back even comes with this same cooler. The shroud is made out of high grade plastic and decorated with three colors: black, silver, and metallic-red, both the silver and red have a very smooth metal-like feel to it, while the black has a rugged texture.
Asus Strix GTX 980 Ti

At the back you find a thick aluminum back-plate which, Asus like to call the fortifier, to impart rigidity & effective cooling experience to the card. For a card measuring in at over 11' this is must to avoid it from warping under its own weight. I'm kind of impressed by the GPU retention bracket clearly visible through a cut out and coated in red metallic paint.
Asus Strix GTX 980 Ti

Near the bottom you'll find four of the five massive industrial grade chrome coated copper heat pipes turning inwards towards the GPU and a PCIe gen 3.0 connector for installation. The locking notch has Asus printed on it, yeah yeah we know its your card don't worry *wink*
Asus Strix GTX 980 Ti

The Strix GTX 980 Ti is four way SLI compatible through a SLI connector located on top left. But for best compatibility its advised that one sticks with two of these power houses.
Asus Strix GTX 980 Ti

A LED backlit Strix logo is present on the extreme top right. Its pulsation pattern can be controlled via the GPU Tweak II utility. This will be visible from your case's transparent side panel so a nice little touch I'd say.
Asus Strix GTX 980 Ti

This beast feeds upon two 8-pin PCIe power connectors and is said to consume 250W tops which is way off the actual mark and can reach all the way upto 300w+ under full load! Two white LED are located near the connectors and light up once the connections are done properly and the card is powered on.
Asus Strix GTX 980 Ti

On the card you’ll find all the latest connections required to get your setup up and running whether single or multi-display, those include: one Dual-Link DVI, one HDMI 2.0, and three DisplayPort 1.2, so in total you can configure up to four monitors to run at the same time (three in 4K).
Asus Strix GTX 980 Ti

Asus Strix GTX 980 Ti

Unscrew the six spring loaded screws at the back and you have the GTX 980 Ti popped open. Now you can easily see how massive the heatsink on this card is and gives it is humongous size of 12 inches in length, 5.5 inches in height and 1.5 inches in width.
Asus Strix GTX 980 Ti

Looking at the heatsink first we realize that its an arrangement of five copper heat-pipes out of which two are 10mm in diameter, two are 8mm and one is 6mm. Each of these pipes are twined and twisted strategically through the aluminum fin stack for optimum heat dissipation.The two 10mm ones and one of the 8mm one makes direct contact with the GPU. A thermal pad on one side is also present to keep the MOSFET cool.
Asus Strix GTX 980 Ti

Asus Strix GTX 980 Ti

The DirectCU III features triple 0dB fans engineered with a patented, new wing-blade design that delivers maximum air flow and improved 105% static pressure over the heat sink, while operating at 3X quieter volumes than reference cards. These fans by default don't spin at all until the card doesn't hit 60°C or more so don't get worried if they don't spin upon turning powering on the system.
Asus Strix GTX 980 Ti

Coming over to the PCB we find the Maxwell based GM200-310-A1 chip that powers the GTX 980 Ti and imparts 2816 CUDA/Shader/Stream cores.
Asus Strix GTX 980 Ti

From the power point of view the Strix GTX 980 Ti Asus had employed a 12+2 phase power design. Twelve are for the GPU and two are for the memory chips. This is a beefy arrangement but a definitely needed one to keep a card this powerful stable under load or while overclocking. Super Alloy Power II components greatly enhance efficiency, reduce power loss, provide 2X reduced component buzzing while under full load, and achieve thermal levels that are approximately 50% cooler than previous designs.
Asus Strix GTX 980 Ti

Asus Strix GTX 980 Ti

Due to my camera's focal limitations I can't show you clear pictures of the voltage regulators but voltage regulation for the GPU is handled by an ASP1500U controller, and the memory uses a uP1641P controller.
Asus Strix GTX 980 Ti

The memory chips for the GTX 980 Ti are SKHynix H5GQ4H24MFR-R2C and are rated at 1750Mhz (7000Mhz effective)  at 1.5V.

Test Setup and Benchmarks

Asus Strix GTX 980 Ti

The Asus Strix GTX 980 Ti comes out of the box at 1216Mhz on the base clock and 1317Mhz as boost frequency which is already quite high from the reference GTX 980 Ti but that doesn't mean the card cannot be overclocked. The product comes bundled with the Asus own GPU Tweak II utility but we like to stick to the conventional MSI AfterBurner for overclocking almost every card that hit our bench.
Asus Strix GTX 980 Ti

By increasing the power limit to 110% and increasing the core clock by 51Mhz and memory clock to 425Mhz we reached a stable over clock with a whopping 1267Mhz on the base clock and 1368Mhz on the boost! This is still less from the card's true overclocking potential so you are free to go ahead and try your luck any further.
In the gaming benchmarks we'll be using the the default out of the box speed aswell as the overclocked speed for comparison.
Asus Strix GTX 980 Ti 
For testing the Asus Strix GeForce GTX 980Ti we got a great test-bench with components that would not bottleneck the product at all delivering precise results in all scenarios. The configuration of our test bench is as follows --

CPU: Intel Core i7 5960X 3Ghz octacore processor
Motherboard: GIGABYTE X99 SLI
RAM: Kingston HyperX Predator 16GB DDR4 (4x4) 3000Mhz Memory Kit
Cooler: Corsair H100i GTX 240mm Liquid Cooler
Graphics Card: Asus Strix GTX 980ti 6GB DDR5
Storage: SK Hynix SL300 500GB SSD || Corsair Neutron GTX 480GB SSD
Power Supply: Corsair AX860i 860W 80+ Platinum
OS: Windows 10 Pro 64-bit
BIOS: F1
GPU Driver: NVIDIA ForceWare 355.60
Asus Strix GTX 980 Ti

AIDA64 Extreme Edition GPGPU

The AIDA64 GPGPU test not only calculates the read, write and copy speed of the graphics card and processor but is also very useful in observing the SHA-1 Hash and AES-256 score. These are indications of how well the GPU can handle number crunching or real life image or video rendering. Higher score shows a better card.
Asus Strix GTX 980 Ti
Clearly the Strix GTX 980 Ti is compatible not only for gaming but also for 4K video and image rendering/editing.

Unigine Heaven 4.0

A compilation of 26 beautiful scenes rendered and run via the raw GPU power of the system. It emulates any game of graphical work that you'll perform on the system scoring it on various parameter. We ran the test on Custom preset and settings at 1920x1080 resolution, quality to ultra and extreme tessellation.
Asus Strix GTX 980 Ti
Asus Strix GTX 980 Ti
One drawback over here is that Unigine Heaven 4.0 can't recognize more than 4GB of VRAM so the results are much lower than what they could've been in real life. Thank god there are games to test that!

3D Mark Fire Strike

Fire Strike by 3D Mark is a test suit that plays a cinematic scene to determine the FPS, GPU temperature and CPU temperature scaling everything via a cumulative score. It is a great tool to benchmark your GPU since the render is GPU dependent.
Asus Strix GTX 980 Ti 
We can clearly see that the 6GB of memory is benefiting the card greatly in the Ultra test which emulates 4K performance indicating that the card is clearly worthy of 4K gameplay and movie playbacks.

3D Mark 11 Professional Edition

Another variant of the Fire Strike by 3D Mark, used mainly for scoring the GPU performance.
Asus Strix GTX 980 Ti
Asus Strix GTX 980 Ti 
An excellent set of scores can be seen over here in both extreme and performance suits indicating towards the real potential of the card.

Crysis 3

Asus Strix GTX 980 Ti 
I can't start gaming benchmarks without running my all time favorites Crysis 3 but its a game that no system loves! The CryEngine 3 behind this scenic beauty can bring down any system to its knees and I mean any system. I set everything to Ultra at 1920x1080 resolution with MSAA 4X and motion blur high.

Tomb Raider 2013

 Asus Strix GTX 980 Ti
The reincarnation of Lara Croft in the spectacular Tomb Raider 2013 with stunning graphics and TressFX makes it a great game to benchmark with especially on Nvidia cards and also to enjoy in the due course! Settings were at Ultimate with TressFX enabled on full HD resolution.

Alien Isolation

Asus Strix GTX 980 Ti 
Its a great game for people, like me, who love to hunt down Xenomorphs or aliens with guns blazing all over the place. The game is highly optimized for PC and supports DirectX 11 with Tessellation, real-time Direct Compute radiosity, and shadows making it an ideal game to benchmark with settings at Ultra.

Batman Arkham Origins

Asus Strix GTX 980 Ti 
Since the game is powered by Epic's Unreal Engine 3 and supports DX11 tessellation so playing this game on 1920x1080 resolution with all settings maxed out can be any modern system's 'worst nightmare'! Wonder if they were drunk while creating the Arkham Knight *wink*
In this case I dared to set hardware acceleration physx to high and even anti-aliasing to GeForce TXAA high!

Battlefield 4

Asus Strix GTX 980 Ti 
Based on the DICE's Frostbite Engine 3 this game not only taxes a CPU and GPU both by reproducing lush details on the screen but also utilizes the DX11 and DX11.1 features coupled with 64-bit binaries! Settings were at Ultra with antialiasing deferred at 2x MSAA and ambient occlusion enabled.

Far Cry 4

 Asus Strix GTX 980 Ti
A bit poorly optimized game for the PC port adds up to its taxing nature on systems! Powered by the latest version of the Dunia 2 engine, Far Cry 4 takes advantage of DirectX 11 and is extremely resource heavy. Optimized for Nvidia GPUs this game can be taxing on AMD cards on higher settings. Settings at Very High on 1920x1080 resolution with Fur on, Godrays, Volumetric fog and ambient occlusion enabled.

Mad Max

Asus Strix GTX 980 Ti 
Powered by the Havok engine you find yourself in the shoes of a man struggling for survival on a post apocalyptic earth. A beautiful game that we tested at everything cranked up to maximum on full HD resolution.

Assassin's Creed 4 - Black Flag

Asus Strix GTX 980 Ti 
A beautiful creation by Ubisoft that can be severely punishing on most of the GPUs since it has a lot of water texture to render and rich distant objects to reproduce on the screen. God rays were enabled at high and details were set at High. Anti-aliasing was at TXAA 4X along with ambient occlusion to HBAO+ (High). Keep in mind that this game is optimized for Nvidia GPUs and not neutral.

GTA V

Asus Strix GTX 980 Ti 
I know you were missing this in the list, don't worry I've got your back. Rock Star Games made the PC port of this game so well optimized that by utilizing the CPU and GPU alike it produces scenes that can put any console to shame, to put it mildly. We tested the game at Very High settings at 2xMSAA, Grass, Reflection and Post FX at Ultra. Anisotropic Filtering was at x16 and reflections MSAA off.

Noise & Temperature

Asus Strix GTX 980 Ti 
The fans on the Asus Strix GTX 980 Ti don't spin at all as long as the card is under 60°C this includes idle state, movies playback and even mild gaming. We recorded the maximum temperature in Celsius that our card hit during extensive gaming & sound was measured in decibels from a distance of 3 feet. This was performed for both stock and overclocked speeds.

My Verdict

When the Asus Strix GTX 980 Ti landed on my desk I had high expectations from the product from the get go itself, since its a top dog in the consumer graphics card market leaving very little margin for disappointment of any sort. The card indeed performed well and not only did it surpass the reference model by steads but also justifies every penny spent on it.
Asus Strix GTX 980 Ti
Asus by offering a DirectCU III cooler on their GTX 980 Ti not only increased the over clocking and performance potential but added just the right amount of bling to it with LED backlit emblem & a flashy red GPU bracket. The quad SLI support, though solemnly needed, is a nice addition to the over all bundle. Overclocking capability is magnificent and the card stay both quiet and cool under medium to no load. Physically its a bit big & could've been a bit more compact increasing its compatibility with the very powerful mITX and ITX builds that many go for these days.
But all good thing come at a price and the Asus Strix GTX 980 Ti is no exception with a hefty price tag of $670 or Rs. 62,000 in India making it a card only for the power users who want nothing less but the very best for their gaming or visual editing experience.
I give it a 9.5/10 

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