EVGA GeForce GTX TITAN SuperClocked Signature 6GB GDDR5 384-Bit, Dual-Link DVI-I, DVI-D, HDMI,DP, SLI Ready Graphics Card 06G-P4-2793-KR

EVGA  GeForce GTX TITAN SuperClocked Signature 6GB GDDR5 384-Bit, Dual-Link DVI-I, DVI-D, HDMI,DP, SLI Ready Graphics Card  06G-P4-2793-KR

  • Virtual Reality Ready
  • Base Clock: 876 MHz; Boost Clock: 928 MHz
  • CUDA Cores: 2688
  • Memory: 6144MB GDDR5 384bit; Memory Clock: 6008 MHz Effective
  • NVIDIA TXAA, NVIDIA GPU Boost 2.0, NVIDIA PhysX, NVIDIA FXAA, NVIDIA Adaptive Verticle Sync, NVIDIA Surround, NVIDIA 3D Vision Ready, NVIDIA 4-Way SLI Ready, NVIDIA CUDA Technologies

Welcome to the era of Supercomputer Gaming. With the DNA of the world’s fastest supercomputer and the soul of NVIDIA’s Kepler architecture, the EVGA GeForce GTX Titan GPU is a revolution in PC gaming performance. The EVGA GeForce GTX Titan combines extraordinary power, advanced control features with EVGA Precision X, and game-changing thermal and acoustic capabilities to provide an entirely new class of super-performance graphics cards.

Price:

Customer Reviews


10 of 11 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars
Ignore the haters., June 2, 2013
This review is from: EVGA GeForce GTX TITAN SuperClocked Signature 6GB GDDR5 384-Bit, Dual-Link DVI-I, DVI-D, HDMI,DP, SLI Ready Graphics Card 06G-P4-2793-KR (Personal Computers)
Titan owners didn’t buy this card with value in mind.
In the same way a buyer of a Lamborghini isn’t looking for value.
When people point to the, “Flaws” of this godly card, the do so with two usual complaints (now three).
“The price for perfomance, isn’t worth it”.
Yet if they are complaining about the price, they certainly do not have one and go off websites, people who also can’t afford it and AMD fanboys.
Most owners are extremely happy with this card, once Nvidia drivers fixed the idling problems shortly after launch.
“The GTX 690 is faster and a better deal.”
You can always spot a tech person who doesn’t know what they are talking about when they compare this to the GTX 690, which is two 680 chips.
The 690 might be slightly faster, but it’s also two cards and close to the same price – it’s SLI, so microshuttering is a issue and I know plenty of people who do not want to deal with it.
Titan is one card, that nearly beats the 690, so the fair comparison would be two Titans, which would eat the 690.
The Titan completely outsold the 690 as well, so it’s clear many people agree.
Finally the newest one, “Nvidia ripped me off, the 700 series, is much cheaper for the perfomance which is very close to that of the Titan.”
Again people who bought the titan, don’t worry about money, so this isn’t a issue, the Titan is still the fastest single card today.
When the price of the Titan drops, or people foolishly jump ship and sell it used, you will be able to SLI two Titans for the same price or close range of the 780.
In short, future investment is great, if you buy the titan, so hardly a waste of cash.
I game at 2560 x 1440, and the Titan is the best card for that.
The complaints about the 700 series, taking away from the titan are idiotic.
The Titan is still the fastest card in the world, and you can make the same complaint with any peice of technology today.
Phones, Tablets, Processors, ect.
You buy a new car, then a new model comes out, you shouldn’t feel ripped off and it shouldn’t take away from your car.
Things evolve, that’s just how it works.

This is the best card I have ever owned, and performs better than any card I have ever known.
It’s quiet(even with fan high), easy on power, looks great, overclocks well, and will run every game on max settings great, for most likely ten years and that isn’t
Apparently the people who say “It will last you three years”, haven’t taken a peak at new console graphic power (X-box ONE and PS4) – which will provide better ports due to the are pretty much PCs now.
In any case, these new generation consoles, will likely last 5-8 years once launched, the Titan is much more powerful.
Even with the new consoles maxed out and really pushed, you will not even come close to upgrading this card until the end of the cycle.
One hundred dollars a year for that kind of investment is worth it.
The Titan is simply amazing.

However if you are sitting there, questioning if the card is worth the price tag, and looking at the 700 series.
Money is most likely a issue for you.
If you can easily afford the Titan, it’s a no brainer with disposable income.
However, if one thousand dollars, maxes you out and SLI in the future remains a unknown option money wise, you should pass.
The 700 series would be a better investment if you have limited funds, in both SLI and single set ups.

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11 of 12 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars
Best single GPU by far!, April 28, 2013
Verified Purchase(What’s this?)
This review is from: EVGA GeForce GTX TITAN SuperClocked Signature 6GB GDDR5 384-Bit, Dual-Link DVI-I, DVI-D, HDMI,DP, SLI Ready Graphics Card 06G-P4-2793-KR (Personal Computers)
Picked myself up a GTX Titan and switched from a pair of XFX 7970’s and couldn’t be happier. Game play is much smoother and no more crossfire issues are present. Overall, outstanding card that while expensive does exactly what it’s supposed to.
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6 of 7 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars
Tremendous Performance, Astonishingly Quiet, Amazingly Low Temperatures, May 5, 2013
By 
T. Scott (Portland, Oregon) – See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)
  

Verified Purchase(What’s this?)
This review is from: EVGA GeForce GTX TITAN SuperClocked Signature 6GB GDDR5 384-Bit, Dual-Link DVI-I, DVI-D, HDMI,DP, SLI Ready Graphics Card 06G-P4-2793-KR (Personal Computers)
Tremendous 3D performance in multimedia applications and games. Astonishingly quiet operation even under heavy load. Smooth and powerful rendering power across multiple display panels. Surprisingly low temperatures even under heavy load.

My system:

Cooler Master Cosmos II Tower
Enermax MaxRevo 1350W Power Supply
MSI Big Bang-XPower II Intel LGA 2011 X79 Mainboard
Intel Core i7-3960X Extreme Edition Sandy Bridge-E 3.3GHz LGA 2011 CPU
3-Way SLI EVGA GTX TITAN SuperClocked Signature 06G-P4-2793-KR
Corsair Dominator GT 32GB (4 x 8GB) DDR3 1866Mhz (PC3 15000) 1.5v CAS 9-10-9-27 SDRAM
RAID-0 Boot Set: Two Samsung 830 Series 512GB Solid State Drive Array (1TB)
RAID-0 Data Set A: Two Western Digital RE4 2TB SATA 3.0Gb/s 3.5" 7200 RPM Disk Array (4TB)
RAID-0 Data Set B: Two Western Digital RE4 2TB SATA 3.0Gb/s 3.5" 7200 RPM Disk Array (4TB)
RAID-5 Archive Set: Four Western Digital Green 2TB 5400 RPM Drobo External Disk Array (6TB)
Noctua NH-D14 SE2011 6-Heatpipe CPU Heatsink
Two Pioneer BDR-207DBKS Blu-ray burners

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2 thoughts on “EVGA GeForce GTX TITAN SuperClocked Signature 6GB GDDR5 384-Bit, Dual-Link DVI-I, DVI-D, HDMI,DP, SLI Ready Graphics Card 06G-P4-2793-KR Reviews”
  1. 10 of 11 people found the following review helpful
    5.0 out of 5 stars
    Ignore the haters., June 2, 2013
    By 

    This review is from: EVGA GeForce GTX TITAN SuperClocked Signature 6GB GDDR5 384-Bit, Dual-Link DVI-I, DVI-D, HDMI,DP, SLI Ready Graphics Card 06G-P4-2793-KR (Personal Computers)
    Titan owners didn’t buy this card with value in mind.
    In the same way a buyer of a Lamborghini isn’t looking for value.
    When people point to the, “Flaws” of this godly card, the do so with two usual complaints (now three).
    “The price for perfomance, isn’t worth it”.
    Yet if they are complaining about the price, they certainly do not have one and go off websites, people who also can’t afford it and AMD fanboys.
    Most owners are extremely happy with this card, once Nvidia drivers fixed the idling problems shortly after launch.
    “The GTX 690 is faster and a better deal.”
    You can always spot a tech person who doesn’t know what they are talking about when they compare this to the GTX 690, which is two 680 chips.
    The 690 might be slightly faster, but it’s also two cards and close to the same price – it’s SLI, so microshuttering is a issue and I know plenty of people who do not want to deal with it.
    Titan is one card, that nearly beats the 690, so the fair comparison would be two Titans, which would eat the 690.
    The Titan completely outsold the 690 as well, so it’s clear many people agree.
    Finally the newest one, “Nvidia ripped me off, the 700 series, is much cheaper for the perfomance which is very close to that of the Titan.”
    Again people who bought the titan, don’t worry about money, so this isn’t a issue, the Titan is still the fastest single card today.
    When the price of the Titan drops, or people foolishly jump ship and sell it used, you will be able to SLI two Titans for the same price or close range of the 780.
    In short, future investment is great, if you buy the titan, so hardly a waste of cash.
    I game at 2560 x 1440, and the Titan is the best card for that.
    The complaints about the 700 series, taking away from the titan are idiotic.
    The Titan is still the fastest card in the world, and you can make the same complaint with any peice of technology today.
    Phones, Tablets, Processors, ect.
    You buy a new car, then a new model comes out, you shouldn’t feel ripped off and it shouldn’t take away from your car.
    Things evolve, that’s just how it works.

    This is the best card I have ever owned, and performs better than any card I have ever known.
    It’s quiet(even with fan high), easy on power, looks great, overclocks well, and will run every game on max settings great, for most likely ten years and that isn’t
    Apparently the people who say “It will last you three years”, haven’t taken a peak at new console graphic power (X-box ONE and PS4) – which will provide better ports due to the are pretty much PCs now.
    In any case, these new generation consoles, will likely last 5-8 years once launched, the Titan is much more powerful.
    Even with the new consoles maxed out and really pushed, you will not even come close to upgrading this card until the end of the cycle.
    One hundred dollars a year for that kind of investment is worth it.
    The Titan is simply amazing.

    However if you are sitting there, questioning if the card is worth the price tag, and looking at the 700 series.
    Money is most likely a issue for you.
    If you can easily afford the Titan, it’s a no brainer with disposable income.
    However, if one thousand dollars, maxes you out and SLI in the future remains a unknown option money wise, you should pass.
    The 700 series would be a better investment if you have limited funds, in both SLI and single set ups.

    Help other customers find the most helpful reviews 

    Was this review helpful to you? Yes
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  2. 11 of 12 people found the following review helpful
    5.0 out of 5 stars
    Best single GPU by far!, April 28, 2013
    By 

    Verified Purchase(What’s this?)
    This review is from: EVGA GeForce GTX TITAN SuperClocked Signature 6GB GDDR5 384-Bit, Dual-Link DVI-I, DVI-D, HDMI,DP, SLI Ready Graphics Card 06G-P4-2793-KR (Personal Computers)
    Picked myself up a GTX Titan and switched from a pair of XFX 7970’s and couldn’t be happier. Game play is much smoother and no more crossfire issues are present. Overall, outstanding card that while expensive does exactly what it’s supposed to.
    Help other customers find the most helpful reviews 

    Was this review helpful to you? Yes
    No

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