Munx wrote on 2026-01-15, 10:29:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yteN21aJEvE
Looks like you got yours just in time. […]
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clueless1 wrote on 2026-01-11, 14:40:
clueless1 wrote on 2025-12-21, 17:58:
I just did the same thing. I've been running an RTX 2080 8GB for the past couple of years (I game at only 1080p) while my son is running an RTX 4070 12GB with a 1440p monitor. With a budget of ~$400, I had narrowed my upgrade down to either the RX 9600XT 16GB or RTX 5060Ti 16GB. Then I had the idea to go in with my son. Talked with him about it, and he agreed. So now I'm buying an RTX 5070Ti for $750 (~814 with tax). My son will give me his RTX 4070 plus $407, and he will get the 5070Ti. He gets a 50% bump in performance (RTX 4070 to RTX 5070Ti) for $407 while I get a 50% bump in performance (RTX 2080 to RTX 4070) for $407.
The best part is we're each getting a huge upgrade for significantly less $$ than if we each upgraded separately.
The 5070Ti finally arrived yesterday.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yteN21aJEvE
Looks like you got yours just in time.
Meanwhile the 9070XT I bought is now 100EUR more expensive than it was a month ago.
What a great market our tech overlords brought us.
Whelp... I think I made the right choice. Even though I told myself recently that I wasn't going to get a GPU, I couldn't pass up an Open Box Zotac RTX 4070 Ti Super Amp Holo about a month ago. Got it for $595 ($615 after tax and cashback) straight from Zotac and it has a 2 year warranty. At the time I bought it these exact cards were selling for $800+ on ebay, and all of the internet rumblings told me that this could be the last opportunity to get a decent deal on a card like this for an extremely long time.
I know that going with this versus a new 5070 Ti or 9070\XT is probably a little controversial, but I am comfortable in the Nvidia ecosystem, and the price difference is significantly larger than the average performance difference compared to the 5070 Ti. Also, since I frequently play older games and tinker with forced anisotropic filtering, the quirks that the 5000 series' drivers have had were a turn off for me. If they'd have been the same price I would have probably gone with the new 5070 Ti, but for 30% more money it definitely wasn't going to happen. Either way, going into the DRAM + GPU madness that has been predicted told me that I should snag a 16GB GPU for the long haul.
It took a while to be delivered but I've had it for a couple weeks and so far I've been really happy with it. I haven't gone too crazy with the tuning but I have settled on an undervolt curve that peaks at 2715Mhz at 935mV, with a +1500Mhz memory overclock (tested stable using Memtest Vulkan). The power consumption is down about 50-60 watts from stock and between the undervolt and memory overclock performance is actually up around 5%! In the 3dmark Speedway test I scored 6820 at these settings, topped out between 227-236 watts and only hit 58C while the GPU fans don't even have to spin up much past idle due to the huge cooler. It idles at 18 watts too... which just seems crazy.
I have been really surprised at how much of a difference there has been in performance and efficiency vs the Asus 3080 TUF 10GB I was using. That card will be going into the living room PC since it can also undervolt to the point of barely even being audible under load... a massive upgrade from the 3050 in that machine and still idles down enough for power consumption to not be too wasteful if we use it to watch a show or something.
I think the only complaint I have about the Zotac Amp Holo card at all is that the firmware has the fans permanently set to jump from 0 RPM to 30% (around 900RPM) and there is no way to smooth that out, even with firmware based fan curves (which don't seem to work well on this card at all and don't seem to even allow the fans to turn off). Thankfully, when using the "Silent" BIOS setting (it has dual BIOS) it seems to usually keep the fans off while the GPU temp is idling around 45C. It will kind of randomly turn them on at 30% which is audible if my office is dead silent, but it isn't that bad and I can't hear it at all if I'm watching a video or doing anything else. If the fans ever crap out I am prepared to slap some 120mm case fans on it. This is yet another reason I love not having a case window... I can always choose functionality over looks. 🤣
The Asus TUF was a lot easier to get a smooth and unnoticeable fan curve, but I guess that just makes it a better fit for the living room.
So, yeah... I'm in full-on popcorn eating mode on this one. I've got GPUs for my computers that will be more than sufficient for a very long time, and I have a couple of decent spares (EVGA GTX 1080 FTW and EVGA RTX 3050 8GB) in case a relative needs one or we suffer a hardware catastrophe. With 64GB of DDR4-3600, a 5800X3D and two 2TB NVMe drives all picked up near their bottom prices over the past few years, it almost feels like I was upgrading in anticipation of this all going down, but I was actually just wanted to maximize this particular build. Being able to keep everything comfortably running on my 650W Seasonic platinum PSU has also been nice.
Now I'm just going to keep my head down and try not to go crazy watching the second hand prices of all this stuff do strange things in the coming months\years.