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Model: ASUS Dual GeForce RTX™ 4070 EVO OC Edition 12GB GDDR6X is Designed for Broad Compatibility, with a 2.5-Slot Design, Axial-tech Fan Design, 0dB Technology, Auto-Extreme Technology, and More
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Why are some of the 4070's 11 inches in length with 3 fans and some around 9 inches in length with 2 fans? Is there some difference or just cooling efficiencies?
Why are some of the 4070's 11 inches in length with 3 fans and some around 9 inches in length with 2 fans? Is there some difference or just cooling efficiencies?
Why are some of the 4070's 11 inches in length with 3 fans and some around 9 inches in length with 2 fans? Is there some difference or just cooling efficiencies?
Different lengths so people can build large PC's or small form factor PC's
Thanks, good to know! My 11+ inch 2070 that just died is very tight and bending a drive's sata connection. I'm not looking to overclock or play top tier games so this looks to be perfect.
sweet! i have an Alienware R11 which has very small space for the GPU, currently have a 2070 super so this one fits great, probably can sell the old gpu for $150 very quick
It depends on who you ask. People are running 4070 cards with 400W PSUs, although 450W is likely the safer minimum. 550W is the minimum I'd recommend but a 650W+ PSU is probably a better idea.
Don't skimp out on PSUs; I've done it before and it's not worth it. It's better to cut corners in costs elsewhere if needed and pay more for a higher tier PSU (which doesn't mean higher wattage). A nice 550W PSU would be much better than a cheap, low tier 750W PSU.
Last edited by BrainDoc April 4, 2024 at 09:52 AM.
It really depends on your entire system. You might be OK with just 400W or 500W but might need up to 650W.
To know how much PSU you need, you need to know the power use of the whole system. The card itself is spec. at 200W power consumption.
So the power supply that you will need will need to cover everything else in your system plus the 200W for this card. The other parts in your system will have varying power requirements depending on what all you've go installed. For example the CPU power requirements can range from like 40W to 200W. Typical power draw for the parts in your system other than the GPU are probably going to be in the 200-400W ballpark. But it depends. You can find power budget estimators online to give you better idea if you know your parts.
sweet! i have an Alienware R11 which has very small space for the GPU, currently have a 2070 super so this one fits great, probably can sell the old gpu for $150 very quick
I made a similar switch from a 2070 to a 3080 12gb(near exact performance of the 4070) . You're gonna love it! I'm honestly sitting out the 50 series. I can game at 4k 60hz locked most things I need to work on this backlog of epic and steam.
Want vs need want vs need I'm running an evga GeForce rtx 2060 how much better we talking would this be
You can probably find lots of direct comparisons via Google or YouTube. I can tell you that I upgraded from a 1080ti (which is considerably faster than RTX2060) and I'm happy with the performance bump. I only paid $439 for my 4070 though, Open Box from Best Buy. For $500? Kinda steep, IMO, but you're going to notice some significant gains assuming the rest of your PC isn't super slow.
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Don't skimp out on PSUs; I've done it before and it's not worth it. It's better to cut corners in costs elsewhere if needed and pay more for a higher tier PSU (which doesn't mean higher wattage). A nice 550W PSU would be much better than a cheap, low tier 750W PSU.
To know how much PSU you need, you need to know the power use of the whole system. The card itself is spec. at 200W power consumption.
So the power supply that you will need will need to cover everything else in your system plus the 200W for this card. The other parts in your system will have varying power requirements depending on what all you've go installed. For example the CPU power requirements can range from like 40W to 200W. Typical power draw for the parts in your system other than the GPU are probably going to be in the 200-400W ballpark. But it depends. You can find power budget estimators online to give you better idea if you know your parts.
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