ThatOneGuy
New member
First, thanks for taking the time to read this. I'm in the process of designing a new build, and I was wondering if the GTX760 SuperClocked with 4GB DDR5 in 3-way SLI would be more powerful than a single GTX780 Ti. The 760's come out to about $700 USD, about the same as the 780 Ti.
As far as DDR5 goes, the 760's are more spacious with 4GB each, compared to the 3GB on the 780. When you total it up, there's 4x the memory in the 760 setup than the 780.
How much impact would this have on performance, if any? I know that Watchdogs runs about 3.5GB when running; would the 780 Ti suffer any performance degradation because of this?
Really, the GPUs are the only portion of the build that I'm concerned about bottlenecking. Below is the obligatory build specifications.
Case: NZXT Switch 630 Windowed Edition
Motherboard: ASUS Rampage IV Republic of Gamers - Black Edition
CPU: Intel® Core™ i7-4930K Processor
RAM: Dominator® Platinum Series — 64GB 2400MHz
PSU: NZXT Hale90 V2 1200W
Storage: ADATA SP900 Premier Pro 256GB SSD (2x), Seagate Barracuda 7200RPM 2TB (2x)
Optical Drive: Pioneer Blu-ray Burner
The system is cooled by a custom loop liquid cooler, featuring 1x XSPC 360mm Radiator and 1x XSPC 240mm Radiator, with the XSPC dual-bay reservoir / pump combo. This cooling system is residing in my current build, inside the NZXT Case. All of the internals I have currently are going to be replaced, so they don't bear mention here. I already have the money for this build saved and earmarked, so it's not a hypothetical build.
I plan to overclock this system once I get more familiar with how to do this safely (or as safely as can be done), hence the liquid cooling. The only thing I will be adding that is not on this list is the CPU/MB one-piece waterblock.
But, to bring this full circle, which GPU setup would offer the best performance in this rig? I personally think that with the three GPUs and abundance of DDR5 the 760s will reign, but I don't exactly know enough about the chips to make that call.
And yes, I realize that I am the worst kind of person, spending all of this money to buy stuff to overclock without knowing how to OC. That will come in time.
Any and all feedback is more than welcome! See something wrong with my planned build? Constructive criticism is always welcomed, as long as you offer a solution to any problem you point out.
As far as DDR5 goes, the 760's are more spacious with 4GB each, compared to the 3GB on the 780. When you total it up, there's 4x the memory in the 760 setup than the 780.
How much impact would this have on performance, if any? I know that Watchdogs runs about 3.5GB when running; would the 780 Ti suffer any performance degradation because of this?
Really, the GPUs are the only portion of the build that I'm concerned about bottlenecking. Below is the obligatory build specifications.
Case: NZXT Switch 630 Windowed Edition
Motherboard: ASUS Rampage IV Republic of Gamers - Black Edition
CPU: Intel® Core™ i7-4930K Processor
RAM: Dominator® Platinum Series — 64GB 2400MHz
PSU: NZXT Hale90 V2 1200W
Storage: ADATA SP900 Premier Pro 256GB SSD (2x), Seagate Barracuda 7200RPM 2TB (2x)
Optical Drive: Pioneer Blu-ray Burner
The system is cooled by a custom loop liquid cooler, featuring 1x XSPC 360mm Radiator and 1x XSPC 240mm Radiator, with the XSPC dual-bay reservoir / pump combo. This cooling system is residing in my current build, inside the NZXT Case. All of the internals I have currently are going to be replaced, so they don't bear mention here. I already have the money for this build saved and earmarked, so it's not a hypothetical build.
I plan to overclock this system once I get more familiar with how to do this safely (or as safely as can be done), hence the liquid cooling. The only thing I will be adding that is not on this list is the CPU/MB one-piece waterblock.
But, to bring this full circle, which GPU setup would offer the best performance in this rig? I personally think that with the three GPUs and abundance of DDR5 the 760s will reign, but I don't exactly know enough about the chips to make that call.
And yes, I realize that I am the worst kind of person, spending all of this money to buy stuff to overclock without knowing how to OC. That will come in time.
Any and all feedback is more than welcome! See something wrong with my planned build? Constructive criticism is always welcomed, as long as you offer a solution to any problem you point out.
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