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Review: Palit GeForce GTX 980 Ti Super JetStream

by Parm Mann on 15 July 2015, 16:30

Tags: Palit, NVIDIA (NASDAQ:NVDA)

Quick Link: HEXUS.net/qacsuv

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Conclusion

...what makes the GTX 980 Ti all the more satisfying is the fact that Nvidia's partners all appear to have their ducks in a row.

The GTX 980 Ti is shaping up to be one of the finest GeForce GPUs ever released. Awesomely quick and refreshingly refined, it delivers enthusiast thrills in an efficient package that makes its hot-and-thirsty predecessors seem like a distant memory.

There's no doubting the ability of the GPU itself, but what makes the GTX 980 Ti all the more satisfying is the fact that Nvidia's partners all appear to have their ducks in a row. We've seen obvious missteps in prior generations, with muddled display outputs, unnecessary extra power requirements and loud coolers being chief among our list of bugbears, but this time around such issues are few and far between.

We've yet to come across a genuinely disappointing GTX 980 Ti, and it's almost as if Nvidia has toughened its mandate on how partner cards should be produced. The vast majority all share the same I/O configuration, many are overclocked to similar levels, just about all of them require the default 8+6-pin power arrangement, and real attention has been paid to noise levels - fans tend to switch off when idle, and they don't get loud under load.

Following this formula to a tee, Palit's GeForce GTX 980 Ti Super JetStream is shipped with a healthy overclock, well-put-together, designed to keep suitably cool at all times and able to keep noise levels down to an absolute minimum. It is as accomplished as many of its rivals and stands out via a keen retail price tag of around £535.

Bottom line: there are many fine GTX 980 Tis to choose from, but at this price point Palit's Super JetStream should be near the top of your list.

The Good
 
The Bad
Keen pricing for a custom GTX 980 Ti
Awesome performance
Well-tuned fan profile
Very quiet at all times
Lots of overclocking potential
Free game: Batman: Arkham Knight
 
Bigger than most rivals
Stock-clocked memory



Palit GeForce GTX 980 Ti Super JetStream

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The Palit GeForce GTX 980 Ti Super JetStream graphics card is available to purchase from Scan Computers.

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At HEXUS, we invite the companies whose products we test to comment on our articles. If any company representatives for the products reviewed choose to respond, we'll publish their commentary here verbatim.



*UK-based HEXUS community members are eligible for free delivery and priority customer service through the SCAN.care@HEXUS forum.



HEXUS Forums :: 10 Comments

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Good review of an interesting option but you again lament the lack of memory overclock without doing anything to show that it makes a difference. As has been asked before can you do some testing on just a memory overclock to see how it performs?

Alternatively when you review the the Asus Strix version (which contains a memory overclock by default) can you downclock the GPU to do comparisons?
Which of the 980Ti's have had the least (or preferably no) coil whine from your testing?
Stephince
Good review of an interesting option but you again lament the lack of memory overclock without doing anything to show that it makes a difference. As has been asked before can you do some testing on just a memory overclock to see how it performs?

Alternatively when you review the the Asus Strix version (which contains a memory overclock by default) can you downclock the GPU to do comparisons?

I second this.
Nice review & nice card at a great price.
evs
Which of the 980Ti's have had the least (or preferably no) coil whine from your testing?

Would be a lovely thing to start including in reviews.
Just built a new system today for a customer with a R9 390 from XFX. Never experienced coil whine till today and my god it was bad.
Now I know why dogs go running with a dog whistle.

On desktop that was fine but as the card drew more and more power it just got worse.