![]() ![]() You’ll notice EVGA’s new shroud design first. The memory’s untouched compared to the reference version, with a borderline excessive 11GB of GDDR5X of onboard RAM. Before performing any additional overclocking, we saw EVGA’s card hit clock speeds up to 1,850MHz in some games, depending on what was happening on-screen. The numbers aren’t as concrete as they seem, however, as the GTX 1080 Ti regularly surpasses its rated boost clock anyway. That’s a healthy 88MHz leap over the GTX 1080 Ti Founders Edition boost clock-heck, the EVGA card’s base clock is a mere 26MHz away from the stock version’s boost clock. The GTX 1080 Ti SC2 hums along at a 1,556MHz base clock and 1,670MHz boost clock. The major difference under the hood of EVGA’s card is the GPU clock speed. Before we dive into the customizations EVGA made to the SC2, here’s a refresher on the GTX 1080 Ti’s default technical specs, built around the full-fat version of Nvidia’s GP102 graphics processor. ![]()
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