PCPOWERPLAY

Nvidia GeForce RTX 3070 Founders Edition

Ampere impresses again.

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$809

Twww.nvidia.com he Nvidia RTX 3070 is the third Ampere card to be released and it’s a card we’ve really been looking forward to. The 3080 really surprised us with its inter-generation­al performanc­e jump and relative value for money. By most standards though, it’s still a very expensive card that’s priced out of reach of most gamers. The RTX 3070 though is available for under $1,000. That’s around half the price of the outgoing 2080 Ti. Since the RTX 3070 purportedl­y offers performanc­e around the 2080 Ti level, that’s an incredible doubling of ‘frames per dollar’. We have the RTX 3070 Founders Edition on hand for review. Does it deliver on its promise? Of course the RTX 3070 includes all the key Ampere features including improved ray tracing support, Broadcast, Reflex and GSync Ultimate.

The RTX 3070 is the first card built with the GA104 GPU. It packs in 5888 shader cores running at a boost clock of 1730 MHz. These are joined by 46 Ray Tracing cores and 184 Tensor cores. It’s paired up with 8GB of GDDR6 that runs at 14Gbps over a 256 bit bus for a total of 448GB/s of memory bandwidth. The TDP is 220W which is far more palatable than the 350W of many RTX 3080s. It comes with the same single 12-pin power connector found on the 3080 and 3090 FE cards. It still has the rather odd mid card

Our sample settled into a long term boost clock of between around 1890MHz to 1940MHz at 73 C. At this default setting, we saw the card pull a peak of 227W. This is a full 100W less than the 3080 Founders Edition.

At 220W, the TDP of the card is back to more acceptable levels and the 3070’s compact cooler doesn’t need to work anywhere near as hard to keep cool. We saw a peak temperatur­e of 74 C. That will be a bit higher in a closed case, but we were very happy with the effective combinatio­n of cooling capability and low noise levels. Custom cards will likely be very cool and quiet indeed.

As is the case with the other Ampere cards we’ve tested, there isn’t a lot of overclocki­ng headroom. You will gain a bit from overclocki­ng the memory, but the card runs into its power limits quickly. Partner cards will likely feature BIOS’ that allow for less restricted power limits.

In conclusion, the 3070 goes very close to the RTX 2080 Ti at half the price. This is simply incredible. Having said that, the pricing is perhaps a little too high given that high end 3070 cards are the same price as the entry level 3080s which are a big step up in performanc­e. Availabili­ty also remains a concern for the entire range. Then there’s the elephant in the room which is the pending release of the AMD Radeon RX 6000 series. At the time of writing we only had AMD’s performanc­e measuremen­ts on hand. We’ll reserve judgment until we do our own independen­t testing, but the competing models could end up being very strong indeed. Unless

The RTX 3070 competes well with the 2080 Ti at half the price, but we’d suggest waiting a little bit longer before making a decision.

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