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GTX750Ti review.

Soldato
Joined
27 Apr 2012
Posts
4,068
GTX750Ti - The new generation of efficiency

Over the last few years, we have seen diminishing returns on performance with each new generation of chip lithography. As each node gets smaller chip makers are faced with a multitude of problems which get harder to overcome. One of these issues is heat and current leakage, having an increased number of transistors situated closer to each other can be quite a struggle to contain the increased heat. Chip makers are not only looking to increase performance but they're all trying to produce the most efficient chips too. Enter Nvidia's next architecture.



Maxwell
The entire gaming & mining world has long awaited the introduction of Maxwell from Nvidia, we all saw the roadmap posted by Nvidia over a year ago (clicky) claiming a huge increase in performance whilst being much more efficient than the current generation. Is the 750Ti a teaser of what is to come?

The engineers who worked on Kepler only had to look at their buddies who worked on the Tesla chips to double the performance per watt. Kepler had a number of efficiency issues, the main one being that the controller could not power down if the cores were idle, leaving your GPU sucking more power than was needed! Nvidia have now split the controllers up and allowed each controller to power down if the cores are idle, giving us incredible savings. Alongside that a lower memory bandwidth is used with Maxwell through upping the L2 cache size which saves further power.



Asus 750Ti OC specs
  • CUDA Cores - 640
  • Base Clock - 1072Mhz
  • Boost Clock - 1150MHz
  • 2048MB rated at 5400Mhz
  • 128-bit memory bus
  • 86.4 GB/s bandwidth

The specs may not look much, but this card packs a mighty punch for it's specifications! :cool:
It is worth noting that this card comes with a 6pin power connector, as it's the OC version it cannot be powered solely off the PCIe slot.



The box & whats inside
The Asus line of cards are always a favourite among gamers, and the box is the same as previous generations we all recognise:
fPpSynFl.jpg
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Inside it there wasn't much. The graphics card obviously, alongside the usual drivers CD and manual. I have placed one of my ref 290s next to it so you guys have a reference of the size:
F63Imitl.jpg

ndLIzIAl.jpg


The shroud on this card actually extends it quite a bit, much like the smaller GTX670s if you remember those little beasts:
FaGkjyMl.jpg




My rig
I reverted everything back to stock for these tests. I don't find the need to overclock with my rig anymore either, she plays my games fine and mines the rest of the time.

  • CPU - 3930k @ stock.
  • RAM - 8GB Samsung Green @ stock
  • MB - Gigabyte X79-UD3
  • PSU - Corsair AX1200i
  • GFX - ASUS GeForce 750Ti OC @ stock.
  • DRV - Nvidia WHQL 335.23 (latest @ time)
  • CPU-Z & GPU-Z - (clicky)

Now lets get down to some figures. ;)



Heaven 4.0 & Valley 1.0
Heaven 4.0 & Valley 1.0 are standard benchmarks which are used across the world to test the performance of your GPU, once the benchmark is complete it gives you a score dependent on how your card performed (max fps, min fps, & frames drawn).

Although the card is aimed at the low-to-mid range gamers, benchmarks are used to stress your card and see far it can perform, for this reason I used the following settings for these benchmarks:
Z1Gf89Z.png
e9ahNib.png


Heaven 4.0 results: The average FPS was 33, with a minimum of 7.6 and a maximum of 65.9! This gave me a score of 854, not bad eh? (clicky)

Valley 1.0 results: The average FPS was 36.3, with a minimum of 18.6 and a maximum of 66.3! A final score of 1520 (clicky)

Not only did the card perform amazingly well, the temperatures did not exceed 67 with a max (auto) fan speed of 57% . I don't know whether I've deafened myself with 3 ref 290s mining full blast, but I could not hear this card at all during either of the tests. The 3 Gentle-Typhoons on my radiator were louder than the card.
B5o7wG9.png




Crysis 3
Can it play Crysis? The popular question with all graphics cards. Yes, it can! :)
I was surprised to find that I held an almost steady 60FPS with Crysis 3. I had the settings all on High, apart from motion blur being turned off & lens flare off. Anistropic filtering was 4x, I used FXAA to soften the edges. It looked wonderful, it was smooth and I was in the top three of the server within a couple minutes of joining!

The card didn't breach 66 with auto fan and actually boosted to 1202MHz at stock. Again, the fan was completely inaudible to me. Here is a snapshot of my Afterburner monitoring:
lAHvZH0.png




Metro Last Light Benchmark
Although the common thing for graphics enthusiasts to say is "Can it Run Crysis 3?", I believe a more demanding challenge is Metro Last Light which every graphics review should tackle. The game is simply beautiful to the eye, even the first still causes trouble for cards today.

As this is a benchmark, again I cranked the settings up a touch. It achieved a maximum FPS of 71 and a low of 17, if I were to be playing the game I would certainly take the SSAA down a touch. I kept Nvidia PhysX off also. As demanding as MLL is, I think this card did quite alright.
PhIonAM.png





Overclocking
The 750ti I received showed up as having Samsung memory, as you can see in the previous GPU-z. This gave me a sign that it would overclock well, we all know what Elpida means when you fire up GPU-z on your new card.

7b4Q30Il.png.jpg


I pushed an extra 100MHz on the core easy with an extra 125mhz on the memory. It could have went further, the card now boosted to 1300MHz. Now remember that this card has quite a low power usage, it isn't going to pull monster overclocks alongside the Matrix Plats, Lightnings, Classified etc. To do this with only consuming a couple more watts, 20w I believe, is extremely good. The cards temperature did not go up, and the fan increased an extra 100rpm only.

Heaven 4.0 overclocked & Valley overclocked, added an extra 100+ points to each.
Heaven overclocked: clicky! - Increase of 120 points.
Valley overclocked: clicky! - Increase of 110 points.
An average of around 10% FPS extra. Nice!

The computer temperatures after those two runs:
anUkPX7.png





Mining
Well it seems like the mining crazy has really taken off. I have joined the race myself with 6 290s. So here's a little mining test stock & overclocked for you guys, thanks to the Corsair AX1200i I can also monitor how the much the card is pulling.

My computer stock, which has a HDD, SSD, D5 pump & stock 3930k pulled around 90w at idle:
dCGx60J.jpg


With the settings:
-i 0 -l T5x24 -C 1 -H 2

I managed to do around 255Kh/s Scrypt on ~70w @ stock: clicky!

With an overclock of +100 core & +475 memory, I managed to pull out just under 300. The wattage crept up to about 110w, which is still pretty efficient if you ask me: clicky!

I did not have much time do other testing, but I'm pretty certain that downclocking the card and finding it's sweet spot will provide way better results than that. You can get BIOS editors for the cards which will decrease or increase the TDP of the card etc. I also think as CUDAMiner is optimised and the drivers are optimised, we'll see performance gains.



Verdict
I think this card is perfect for the budget build gamer, it reminds me a lot of the GTX670 though a little weaker, but not by far. And most certainly more power efficient.

Nvidia have really thrown it out there with efficiency and I'm excited to see what the flagship GeForce Maxwell chips will bring. Especially as they achieved these power savings just through architectural changes, the 750 & 750Ti cards are still on the same 28nm node as Kepler.

As for the mining side, I think with a little tweaking it's perfect, but the extra cost of PCI-E risers, motherboards etc would put me off. The noise does attract me though, a rig with 6 of these Asus 750Ti's would certainly be quieter than 2 ref 290s. Having said that, 750Ti is still a solid choice for miners and in my eyes is Nvidia's way of stealing momentum from AMD being the usual choice for all GPU miners.

For the price it is a bargain, and for the budget gamer build it is an even better bargain. A decent little starting rig could be built for under £500 with one of these which I would expect to be better than a PS4/Xbox one.

You can buy these from Overclockers right now:
Asus GeForce GTX 750Ti 2048MB GDDR5 PCI-Express Graphics Card £131.99



I would like to give a special thanks to Asus for providing the card to review. Cheers! :)
 
It's price isn't a bargain though lol, it's a fantastic GPU and brilliant way to showcase what the Maxwell architecture can achieve (amazing performance per watt) it is however overpriced, because you can buy much much better cards for only a fraction more (£10 for a 270/660)

If i was on a budget, i wouldn't opt for that card. Just saying.
 
But you can get a Giga Windforce for £100 after selling the ingame codes, £35(26%) cheaper than the cheapest 270.

It's 27% slower than a 270x, but 33% cheaper. Seems fine in it's price bracket imo.
 
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I'd like to Nvidia put two of these chips on one board to see what kind of performance you could get... Think this is the ideal card atm to put into a mini-ITX build.
 
Rather impressive (very nice results in Crysis 3). I've seen a few of these get a little over 1400 on the core, & can't wait to see what the rest of the range delivers. :)
 
+1 the price is a bit high for the 750TI. :)

Well that is Nvidia's modus operandi. :p

That said, I only have them for a small mining rig, getting 600khash for 170w at the wall, temps for both cards just under 60ºC and fans inaudible.

And that's in a fairly cheap case that I am looking to mod a side vent for the graphics.
 
Nice review. These are great lil cards imho. Prices will come down, always a lil high at launch. When these are around £100, will be best value new cards you can buy.

Interesting to see how well the GTX 850Ti will perform. The bar has def been raised high at the low-mid end.
 
Nice review. These are great lil cards imho. Prices will come down, always a lil high at launch. When these are around £100, will be best value new cards you can buy.

There are 4 versions at £114 or less, with codes that can be sold for at least £10. ;)
 
Well that is Nvidia's modus operandi. :p

That said, I only have them for a small mining rig, getting 600khash for 170w at the wall, temps for both cards just under 60ºC and fans inaudible.

And that's in a fairly cheap case that I am looking to mod a side vent for the graphics.

Agreed, its great for mining :)
 
They are great cards, though I believe for more or less the same money the 660 is actually a little quicker at gaming, but consumes more power.
 
Nice review. These are great lil cards imho. Prices will come down, always a lil high at launch. When these are around £100, will be best value new cards you can buy.

Interesting to see how well the GTX 850Ti will perform. The bar has def been raised high at the low-mid end.

Nice review Liam ;)

Cheers guys. It makes the wait for next gen 8xx seem so long doesn't it!
 
Due to size constraints in my system I'm considering picking up a GTX 750Ti 2048MB (most likely this Gainward one when, or if, they come back into stock) to replace my trusty old GTS450. I game at 1680x1050 so for the games I play it'll do nicely.
 
The price is not that lowwhen the GTX660 and R9 270 can be had for £120 to £130,the R7 265 is close to £100 and any of them will run fine off even a SFX 300W to 350W PSU. People are conveniently forgetting the pricing of these cards has gone down - Nvidia themselves considers the GTX660 a higher tier card.

The GTX750TI is sadly not in a vaccum when it comes to gaming.

Heck,I am running my GTX660 in a SFF system and I am lucky to even see 200W at the wall when gaming with a SB Core i5. That cost me £135 11 months ago with a copy of Metro:Last Light(which was worth at least £25 IIRC).

Anyone with a new IB or Haswell based CPU with a more efficient PSU than the one in my system,will see even lower power figures.

The GTX750TI has it uses for certain systems,which cannot take longer than 7" cards for example or for some mining as people have suggested. However,for gaming the price drops on older graphics card models makes things very competitive.

Due to size constraints in my system I'm considering picking up a GTX 750Ti 2048MB (most likely this Gainward one when, or if, they come back into stock) to replace my trusty old GTS450. I game at 1680x1050 so for the games I play it'll do nicely.

How long is the card you have currently using? This R9 270 for example is under 8" long:

http://www.overclockers.co.uk/showproduct.php?prodid=GX-339-SP&groupid=701&catid=56&subcat=1982
http://www.overclockers.co.uk/showproduct.php?prodid=GX-338-SP&groupid=701&catid=56&subcat=1982

There are also shorter than normal GTX660 cards IIRC too.
 
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this has been a massive help to read thankyou. i bought one a gigabyte one of these after reading a lot of info on them, none as informative or as detailed whilst being straightforward as this. helps someone like me understand it all a little easier, and i can go away knowing i have made a good choice for my first rig.
 
this has been a massive help to read thankyou. i bought one a gigabyte one of these after reading a lot of info on them, none as informative or as detailed whilst being straightforward as this. helps someone like me understand it all a little easier, and i can go away knowing i have made a good choice for my first rig.

Glad I could help! Enjoy your purchase!
 
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