ASUS GeForce GTX 960 Strix 2-way SLI review

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Maxwell Graphics Architecture

Technology & Specifications (Reference)

The GeForce GTX 960 series is based on the latest iteration of GPU architecture called Maxwell, the cards use revision A1 of GM206; as explained the 20 nm node is not yet ready (if ever) and these products are based on the good ol' 28 nm fab node. That will make the chips relatively large in size. Maxwell is an advanced design, the product has has almost 3 Billion transistors tucked away in a S-FCBGA chip. GeForce GTX 960 comes with 1024 CUDA (shader) cores while its big brother the GeForce GTX 980 has 2048 shader processors. The change in shader amount is amongst the biggest differentials together with ROP and TMU count.

  • GeForce GTX 960 has 1024 shader processors and 2 GB of GDDR5 graphics memory.
  • GeForce GTX 970 has 1664 shader processors and 4 GB of GDDR5 graphics memory.
  • GeForce GTX 980 has 2048 shader processors and 4 GB of GDDR5 graphics memory.

The product is obviously PCI-Express 3.0 ready, it has a max TDP of around 120 Watts with a typical idle power draw of 10 Watts. That TDP is a maximum overall, and on average your GPU will not consume that amount of power.
 

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The GM206 is based off the Maxwell architecture, as such you will get the pre-modelled SMX clusters of what is now 128 shader processors per cluster (that used to be 192 on Kepler). There are 8 active clusters for the GTX 960, times 128 shader processors which thus offers you 1024 shader processors. The reference GeForce GTX 960 has a core clock frequency of 1127 MHz with a Boost frequency that can run up to 1178 MHz.

As far as the memory specs of the GM206 Maxwell GPU are concerned, these boards will feature a narrow 128-bit memory bus connected to 2 GB of GDDR5 video buffer memory, AKA VRAM AKA framebuffer AKA graphics memory for the graphics card. On the memory controller side of things you'll see that the reference memory clock (effective data-rate) is now set at 7 GHz / Gbps. The GeForce GTX 900 series is DirectX 11.3 and 12 ready, with Windows 8.1, 7 and Vista also being compatible to take advantage of DirectCompute, multi-threading, hardware tessellation and the latest shader 5.0 extensions. The latest revision of DX12 is a Windows 8 feature only, yet will bring in significant optimizations. DirectX 12 - Direct 3D 12 (low overhead – cross-platform – ready now).

  • Features: Rasterizer Ordered
    Typed UAV load
    Volume tiles resources
    conservative raster
  • Low overhead – Reduce CPU overhead – increase scalability across platforms – Superset of DirectX 11 rendering functionality.
  • Cross Platform

For your reference here's a quick overview of some past generation high-end GeForce cards. Yes, the Maxwell products might seem slower if you look at the specs, but they are heavily optimized and are running at relatively high clock frequencies.
 

GeForce GTX 780 780 Ti Titan Black Titan Z 960 970 980
Stream (Shader) Processors 2304 2880 2880 5760 1024 1664 2048
Core Clock (MHz) 863 875 889 705 1126 1050 1126
Boost Clock 900 928 980 876 1178 1178 1216
Memory Clock (effective MHz) 6000 7000 7000  7000 7000 7000 7000
Memory amount 3072 3072 6144 12288 2048 4096 4096
Memory Interface 384-bit 384-bit 384-bit 384-bit 128-bit 256-bit 256-bit
Memory Type gDDR5 gDDR5 gDDR5 gDDR5 gDDR5 gDDR5 gDDR5
HDCP Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
Display Port Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
HDMI Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes


With 2 GB per GPU, the GTX 960 is not an appealing product with modern games. Lots of them use more than 2 GB these days, even at 1080P. The 128-bit bus doesn't help there either, however Nvidia reworked the memory subsystem quite a bit, enabling much higher memory clock frequency speeds compared to previous generation GeForce GPUs. The result is this; memory speeds up-to 7 Gbps. Combined with some clever advancements in color compression Nvidia can claim even more bandwidth as Maxwell cards now use 3rd generation delta color compression. (ex. 7 Gbps *1/75%) = 9.3 Gbps effective bandwidth thanks to enhanced color compression and enhanced caching techniques. That's a theoretical number though.

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The ASUS GeForce GTX 960 Strix runs at faster clocks (1317 MHz Boost) opposed to the reference specs we mentioned above

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