EVGA GTX 1060 FTW+ Gaming ACX 3.0ġ632 MHz Base Clock, 1860 MHz Boost Clockīelow is our screenshot of GPU-Z. Specifications are from the EVGA website for the 1060 FTW+. That should be plenty considering it’s a 150W draw card (a bit over reference at 120W). Last but not least, EVGA recommends a 400W or greater power supply with a single 8-Pin PCIe connector. The ACX 3.0 cooler, it is a dual slot cooling solution. The card is a bit over 4.25″ high and exactly 11″ long. The card supports up to four monitors and a total resolution of 7680×4320 at 60Hz.įor outputs, you have a typical mix of 1x DL DVI-D, 3x DisplayPort (v1.4), and 1x HDMI (2.0b). The 6GB of GDDR5 memory comes in at 2002 MHz (8000 MHz effective) which is 192 GB/s of bandwidth across its 192-bit bus. It did bump up a bin or so in less stressful tests. In this case, at stock it ran at 2000 MHz most of time. With Boost 3.0, in practice that 1860 MHz is around 100 MHz lower to what most will see while gaming. To that end, the 1060 FTW+ comes in with 1632 MHz base clock with boost to around 1860 MHz. EVGA slapped on its new ACX3.0 cooler, improved upon the reference PCB, and gave it higher clocks. Taking a look at the specifications table and GPU-Z, we see the spec’s of the full blown GTX 1060 6GB. Take a read below and see what features it brought to the table and how it performs in our testing suite! Specifications This card has the updated ACX 3.0 Cooler, a better power delivery area/PCB, as well as the highest clocks of EVGA’s GTX 1060 lineup. Today I had a chance to review EVGA’s flagship GTX 1060 in its FTW+ Gaming ACX 3.0 Video card.
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