I drive my 4K displays with a RX580, and will upgrade next year when the new Vega2 will become affordable.
I'm using AMD so I can get the best of my Hackintosh apps.
I drive my 4K displays with a RX580, and will upgrade next year when the new Vega2 will become affordable.
I'm using AMD so I can get the best of my Hackintosh apps.
EVGA is always my top choice (followed by MSI) and the 2070 Super seems like a great choice for 1440p high graphics.
I have a 2080 Super and a watercooled 1080 ti. The 1080 ti is only about 7% faster than the 2080 super after a mild overclock. Luckily the quality RTX cards overclock really well. My dads 2080 Ti was able to squeeze 20%+ extra with a bit of time spent overclocking.
I've never got into overclocking. Is it worth looking into for someone who has never done it?
These days overclocking is on training wheels. The hardware has safeguards in place to keep you from frying it. (Unless you choose to manually set the voltage, which isnt necessary for average overclocks these days.)
These are the general steps with any manufacturer software
That doesn't sound hard at all. Good to know the card prevents you from destroying it, otherwise I would be afraid to attempt it.
I'm likely to do a complete rebuild soon and I'm still leaning towards Intel even though I know AMD has a lot of support right now. I'm thinking I should get a video card now as I'm sure I will see some performance upgrade even with my aging processor. Currently I have a 960 card
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