Newegg has
MSI Gaming Trio Classic AMD Radeon RX 7900 XTX 24GB GDDR6 PCI Express 4.0 ATX Graphics Card GPU on sale for $899.99 - 12% off ($100) w/ promo code
ZIPGAME (must select Zip Pay as checkout option) =
$799.99.
Shipping is free.
Thanks to Deal Hunter
reptarSnax for posting this deal.
Note: You must select Zip Pay as the payment option at checkout to be eligible for promo code.
Deal Instructions: - Click here to go to product page.
- Add product to cart, apply promo code ZIPGAME and proceed to checkout.
- Under Payment, click the Edit button.
- Under "How do you want to pay?", select "Buy Now, Pay Later".
- Click Zip and review your order
- Price should be $799.99 + Free Shipping
Features:
- 24GB 384-Bit GDDR6
- Boost Clock 2500 MHz
- 1x HDMI 2.1
- 3x DisplayPort 2.1
- 6144 Stream Processors
- PCI Express 4.0
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So you have to decide whether saving $200 (MSRP of 4080 Super is $1000 and there are a couple models usually available at that price) is worth just the marginal raw fps advantage. That's the way I looked at it when I made the decision a couple of months ago. I ended up going with the 4080 Super.
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I'd suggest to record the process of opening the mail package of this item, installing and testing this GPU all in one take.
I am sure my AMEX card would go with my words if I present enough hard evidence.
But I am not sure if Zip would do the same.
It said the condition was "Good" but it came brand spanking new. It still had plastic on the card and all the screws, stickers, pads, etc were all sealed.
Odd thing was that it came with an Asus ROG Strix velcro LOL (presume the previous buyer left it there from his mobo?)
Will 7900XTX fit ? Can it work on 750W?
I'm reading a minimum of 800-850. I bought a 1050 for my Nitro XTX.
Will 7900XTX fit ? Can it work on 750W?
It will likely fit; that PC can be configured with up to an RTX 4090, and those are huge. You can pop it open and measure to be sure.
As to the power, 750watts should be sufficient.
This GPU is rated for 355 watts. Professional reviews measure 345watts while gaming, with occasional spikes up to 410watts.
If you have an i7-13700k, that's rated for 125watts, with boost up to 253watts.
So, if both hit their max at the same time, that's 663 watts.
So, 750watts should work, though I wouldn't try overclocking with that PSU.
Here's a reference for measured 7900XTX power consumption:
https://www.guru3d.com/review/amd...ew/page-6/
They recommend at least a 700-750watt power supply for that GPU.
Ray Tracing has already been said, but another thing to consider is that all of Nvidia 's additional technologies are superior to AMD. We're talking DLSS, RTX frame gen, hardware video encoding, and RTX Voice.
For many folks, RTX Voice alone is worth the Nvidia tax. It's astounding just how good it is.
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So you have to decide whether saving $200 (MSRP of 4080 Super is $1000 and there are a couple models usually available at that price) is worth just the marginal raw fps advantage. That's the way I looked at it when I made the decision a couple of months ago. I ended up going with the 4080 Super.
Will 7900XTX fit ? Can it work on 750W?
Just make sure you have 3 8-pin PCIe connectors available on your PSU.
I'll add great service too. Had to warranty a 6900xtxh black and they were great about it and sent me a new card quickly.
Will 7900XTX fit ? Can it work on 750W?
Note that the 750W power supply doesn't deliver 750W. Depending on the efficiency of the power supply, it will probably deliver 600-650W. With a power draw on the card of ~350W, that leaves you only 250W for the other components. I saw someone else bring up the CPU that you have, which would put you at ~600W right away, making it unlikely this will work without undervolting. Remember that you have a motherboard, SSD, and RAM in your system, which will probably add up to another 50W. If your case has a bunch of fans you could be looking at another 10-20W.
If I were you, I would wait a little while until the next generation from AMD and Nvidia comes out. When you factor in the $100+ it would cost to upgrade your PSU, this really isn't that great of a deal.
Note that the 750W power supply doesn't deliver 750W. Depending on the efficiency of the power supply, it will probably deliver 600-650W. With a power draw on the card of ~350W, that leaves you only 250W for the other components. I saw someone else bring up the CPU that you have, which would put you at ~600W right away, making it unlikely this will work without undervolting. Remember that you have a motherboard, SSD, and RAM in your system, which will probably add up to another 50W. If your case has a bunch of fans you could be looking at another 10-20W.
If I were you, I would wait a little while until the next generation from AMD and Nvidia comes out. When you factor in the $100+ it would cost to upgrade your PSU, this really isn't that great of a deal.
I have a 650W SFX powersupply that powers 12900k, 7900XTX, 13 x 120mm fans, 4 x 140mm, 3 NVMe drives, SB Card, AIO cooler and RGB all around.
Just do the math and your config will draw roughly around <650W at full load. As long as you dont stress test your rig, you will be perfectly fine with the PSU.
You do want to be around 80-90% of your rated PSU to be efficient (reliability, longetivity, etc)
Also it is wrong to claim that your PSU delivers X efficient % of the rated wattage. 750W at 80% does not mean it will deliver 600W to your PC, it means it will draw 938W from your wall and your deliver 750W Max wattage to your PC.
I have a 650W SFX powersupply that powers 12900k, 7900XTX, 13 x 120mm fans, 4 x 140mm, 3 NVMe drives, SB Card, AIO cooler and RGB all around.
Just do the math and your config will draw roughly around <650W at full load. As long as you dont stress test your rig, you will be perfectly fine with the PSU.
You do want to be around 80-90% of your rated PSU to be efficient (reliability, longetivity, etc)
Also it is wrong to claim that your PSU delivers X efficient % of the rated wattage. 750W at 80% does not mean it will deliver 600W to your PC, it means it will draw 938W from your wall and your deliver 750W Max wattage to your PC.
Still, I'm surprised your system works. 3rd party reviews would put the GPU and CPU at ~600W. I have to assume that your system is only working because it's never fully loaded. You're probably not fully hitting your CPU while you play games, which keeps your system from crashing. If you run CPU and GPU stress tests at the same time, mathematically your system will crash unless your PSU is delivering more than it's rated for.
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Still, I'm surprised your system works. 3rd party reviews would put the GPU and CPU at ~600W. I have to assume that your system is only working because it's never fully loaded. You're probably not fully hitting your CPU while you play games, which keeps your system from crashing. If you run CPU and GPU stress tests at the same time, mathematically your system will crash unless your PSU is delivering more than it's rated for.
But using my system for video, gaming, editing which loads all my cores and max freq on my 7900xtx can be done even at my 650W. I have been waiting to replace mine with Corsair SFL 1000W..but just been lazy.