EVGA GeForce GTX 560 Ti 448 Cores Classified 797MHZ 1280MB DVI Display Port PCI-E Video Card
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With 2 User Reviews
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Easy Company@NCIX Rating: Review Date: 12/26/11 |
Cons: None
Pros: Out of the box, matches the performance of a stock 570. With overclocking, hits the performance of a 580. I got it for a great price - $289 (MSRP of 560TI 448 cores). Classified edition always looks good and is "limited edition." Factory overclocked to 792 mhz |
Anthony_C@NCIX Rating: Review Date: 12/24/11 |
Cons: Might be too long for some specific cases
Pros: Extremely fastNice EVGA LED Logo on the fan shroudCool temperatures under load and idle Comment:
When I was deciding my build, it was really between the GTX 560 TI and GTX 570. However, after doing some research, the GTX 560 TI 448 Cores Classified is the perfect balance between the two. It costs less than the 570 yet the performance is right between the two. As of currently, I am running an i5 2500k, 16gb of ram, and a OCZ MAX IOPS SSD, and I am able to run BF3 at max settings at 1920 by 1080 with 60frames+.Definitely a good buy, and also remember this is a limited edition graphics card, so stock for it wont last as long as the other cards. |
Awesome video card for the price. Most people don't realize it but this is currently the best "bang for the buck" video card on the market. EVGA offers a 3 year warranty (KR model) which is great. The 2 big fans for cooling on this video card is very effective - idling at 30 degrees and 60 degrees under BF3 load. Running it on a Dell 1920x1200 resolution monitor no FPS lag or stuttering (ultra settings too).