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⇱ NVIDIA GeForce GTX 750 Ti "Maxwell": A Great Mid-Range GPU For Linux Users Review - Phoronix


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NVIDIA GeForce GTX 750 Ti "Maxwell": A Great Mid-Range GPU For Linux Users

Written by Michael Larabel in Graphics Cards on 18 February 2014 at 09:00 AM EST. Page 2 of 13. 34 Comments.

Some of the other specs on the 28nm-manufactured GM107 for the NVIDIA GeForce GTX 750 Ti 2GB include five streaming multi-processors, 640 CUDA cores, 40 texture units, 16 ROP units, 2MB L2 cache size, 86.4 GB/s memory bandwidth, 40.8 GigaTexels/sec texture fill rate, and there's 1.87 billion transistors. The GeForce GTX 750 (non-Ti) is packing four streaming multi-processors, 512 CUDA cores, 32 texture units, 16 ROP units, 1GB of GDDR5 video memory, 80GB/s memory bandwidth, and 32.6 GigaTexels/sec texture fill rate. The core clock speeds of the GTX 750 non-Ti are the same at 1020MHz with 1085MHz Boost Clock, but the GDDR5 video memory drops from 5400MHz to 5000MHz.

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The GeForce GTX 750 Ti we were supplied with had two DVI ports and one mini HDMI slot.

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For using this first Maxwell graphics card a 300-Watt power supply is recommended while the TDP of the graphics card is 60 Watts (or 55 Watts on the non-Ti version). With being below 75 Watts, no 6-pin PCI Express power connector is required. The thermal threshold for the GM107 GPU is 95 Celsius.

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With Maxwell being very power efficient, cooling the GeForce GTX 750 Ti is just a very petite heatsink fan. This aluminum heatsink did its job fine and there are thermal results that will be shared later in this Phoronix article.

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The video memory on the GTX 750 Ti was from Hynix and was marked part H5GC4H24MFR-T2C.