EVGA released its fresh new Geforce GTX
275 FTW Edition 896-P3-1173-AR
graphics card, which marks a significant achievement in the competitive GTX 275 lineup from various manufacturers for its superior clock speeds and its relatively competitive
pricing.
Not surprisingly, the EVGA Geforce GTX 275 For The Win is
officially the fastest GTX 275 card to date, with clock speeds of a 713MHz
core, 1512MHz shaders, and 896MB of 512-bit GDDR3 memory at 2520MHz. Unfortunately,
this model does not come with double memory chips for a 1792MB configuration,
but the frequencies of its GPU do bring up an interesting observation. When compared with the
Geforce GTX 280 FTW Edition that launched in June 2008 at 670/1458/2430, the new
GTX 275 FTW with the lower model number actually has faster overall clock
speeds.
In terms of theoretical performance at factory overclocked
memory speeds, the 55nm GTX 275 FTW gives roughly 141.12GB/s of memory
bandwidth on a 448-bit interface, while the 65nm GTX 280 FTW gives 155.52GB/s
on a 512-bit interface. It is also important to note that the 55nm GTX 285 FTW
Edition expectedly still tops both models with roughly 177.4GB/s on a 512-bit
interface.
Overall, it seems apparent that memory performance of remains linearly
consistent throughout Nvidia’s GTX 200-series naming scheme on these maximum
factory-overclocked cards. However, the GPU core and shader clock speeds still
play a critical factor in overall performance, and with the apparent number
inconsistencies, we are eager to compare these three top notch cards side by
side to resolve any confusion that may be brought up between the GTX 275 FTW
and GTX 280 FTW.
We do realize that the GTX 280 is not listed on Nvidia's product lineup anymore as it has gone end-of-life and off the shelf, but it should still be recognized that many consumers still own and operate this particular GPU.
Nevertheless, the EVGA Geforce GTX 275 For The Win is currently available
directly from EVGA for $299 and
is expected to make its way to other retailers very shortly.