TerrorFirmer wrote: » I just picked up an EVGA 1080Ti from Ebay for €600 shipped in the end. It was either that or a new Vega 64 Nitro, but I'd only buy a 2nd hand EVGA card due to their incredible transferable warranty. I have noticed the price of the RTX2080 steadily creeping down, not much between it now at all on OCUK - cheapest RTX2080 is £699 with free shipping, cheapest 1080Ti is about £650 without free shipping.
Sesshoumaru wrote: » Do you think your 1080ti is a better long term bet than a 2070 for a little less or a 2080 for a bit more? I'm also looking at new Vega 64 cards (prices seem to be dropping nicely) and also looking at maybe a new 2070 or a secondhand 1080 / 1080ti
K.O.Kiki wrote: » 1080 Ti will probably beat a 2070 even with DLSS (if it ever gets implemented). Vega 64 is not a competitor to 1080 Ti/2080, but rather a tier down; and you'd be better off getting a Vega 56 & watercooling it if you want to go AMD right now.
tuxy wrote: » Lads I know this thread is about Raytracing but is no one hyped for the latest Nvida card released two days ago? GTX 1060 but this time with gddr5x!! Nvidia making their intentions clear on wanting to mostly sell 10 series card for now.
TerrorFirmer wrote: » Depends on the game, Vega 64 is generally on-par overall but scores major victories in some AMD-friendly titles like Far Cry 5, where it's not far off the 1080Ti. Good card and pretty affordable now - OCUK have the Nitro 64 for £480 which is the best 64 you'll get now, runs cool, quiet and fast (and comes with free games). I'd take the Nitro 64 over a watercooled 56, which would end up costing the same in the end really. I wouldn't buy 2nd hand either unless it was a) a seller you know and trust to handle any potential RMA or b) an EVGA card as they have stellar warranty and allow for 2nd hand purchases. I paid €600 posted for my EVGA 1080Ti so I'm satisfied, that's really the upper limit for me going forward. RTX is all ifs, buts and maybes right now, so I've no interest in those cards due to their high pricing, which is driven by unproven/unsupported tech at this time. If I hadn't gotten the 1080Ti 2nd hand I would've gotten the Nitro 64 as I also have Freesync monitor.
K.O.Kiki wrote: » Why innovate when you can just clear stock of GPUs you totally didn't overproduce for mining? :rolleyes:
K.O.Kiki wrote: » You could try buying on OverclockersUK and paying via Amazon account. Or look at a GTX 1080 for £480 for virtually identical performance.
Deleted User wrote: » I'd definitely go for the 3 fan card over the other two.
tuxy wrote: » Would you not base the decision on TU102-300 vs TU102-300A and not number of fans?
TerrorFirmer wrote: » The Strix would presumably be the best but for the same price you'd get a brand new 1080Ti on OCUK, which is way faster and they take Amazon payment if that helps.
Genevieve Disgusting Self-improvement wrote: » Brand new is an interesting way to put it. New old stock is another :pac::D:pac::D:pac:
tuxy wrote: » Full warranty on the 1080ti if it comes in a sealed box. Which of the two cards will give you better performance in games? Cheapest 1080ti vs low tier 2070?
TerrorFirmer wrote: » The 1080ti is the much better card. They're not comparable, it's the 2080 fills that role.
tuxy wrote: » But what about the tensor cores on the 2070, Shadow of the Tomb raider patch could be out this side of Christmas!
Genevieve Disgusting Self-improvement wrote: » I see people dont know what NOS (New old stock) means.....
L wrote: » I suspect most people just don't care until the new new stock is doing something that the new old stock can't or doing what the new old stock does at a lower price point.
tuxy wrote: » But having a 20 series card is like having a car with an 18 plate even if it is a Dacia the neighbors will still be impressed.