The NVIDIA GeForce RTX 2080 Super Review: Memories of the Future
by Ryan Smith on July 23, 2019 9:00 AM EST- Posted in
- GPUs
- GeForce
- NVIDIA
- Turing
- GeForce RTX
Meet the GeForce RTX 2080 Super Founders Edition
Taking a closer look at the RTX 2080 Super, there aren’t too many surprises to be found. Since we’re dealing with a mid-generation kicker here, NVIDIA has opted to stick with their original RTX 2080 reference designs for the new card, rather than design wholly new boards. This has allowed them to get the new card out relatively quickly, and to be honest there’s not a whole lot NVIDIA could do here that wouldn’t be superficial. As a result, the RTX 2080 Super is more or less identical to the RTX 2080 it replaces.
GeForce RTX 20 Series Card Compariaon | ||||
RTX 2080 Super Founders Edition |
RTX 2080 Super (Reference Specs) |
|||
Base Clock | 1650MHz | 1650MHz | ||
Boost Clock | 1815MHz | 1815MHz | ||
Memory Clock | 15.5Gbps GDDR6 | 15.5Gbps GDDR6 | ||
VRAM | 8GB | 8GB | ||
TDP | 250W | 250W | ||
Length | 10.5-inches | N/A | ||
Width | Dual Slot | N/A | ||
Cooler Type | Open Air (2x Axial Fans) |
N/A | ||
Price | $699 | $699 |
As I noted earlier, the Founders Edition cards themselves are now purely reference cards. NVIDIA isn’t doing factory overclocks this time around – the high reference clock speeds making that process a bit harder – so the RTX 2080 Super Founders Edition is very straightforward examples of what reference-clocked RTX 2080 Super cards can deliver in terms of performance. It also means that the card no longer carries a price premium, with NVIDIA selling it at $699.
Externally then, possibly the only material change is quite literally in the materials. NVIDIA has taken the 2080 reference design and given the center segment of shroud a reflective coating. This, along with the Super branding, are the only two visually distinctive changes from the RTX 2080 reference design. For better or worse, the reflective section is every bit the fingerprint magnet that you probably expect, so thankfully most people aren’t handling their video cards as much as hardware reviewers are.
In terms of cooling, this means the RTX 2080 Super gets the RTX 2080’s cooler as well. At a high level this is a dual axial open air cooler, with NVIDIA sticking to this design after first introducing it last year. The open air cooler helps NVIDIA keep their load noise levels down, though idle noise levels on all of the RTX 20 series reference cards has been mediocre, and the new Super cards are no different. The fact that this reference design isn’t a blower means that the RTX 2080 Super isn’t fully self-exhausting, relying on the computer chassis itself to help move hot air away from the card. For most builders this isn’t an issue, but if you’re building a compact system or a system with limited airflow, you’ll want to make sure your system can handle the heat from a 250W video card.
Under the hood, the RTX 2080 Super inherits the RTX 2080’s heatsink design, with a large aluminum heatsink running the full length of the card. Deeper still, the heatsink is connected to the TU104 GPU with a vapor chamber, to help move heat away from the GPU more efficiently. Overall, the amount of heat that needs to be moved has increased, thanks to the higher TDP, however as this is also the same cooler design that NVIDIA uses on the 250W RTX 2080 Ti, it's more than up to the task for a 250W RTX 2080 Super.
According to NVIDIA the PCB is the same as on the regular RTX 2080. As I need this card for further testing, I haven’t shucked it down to its PCB to take inventory of components. But as the RTX 2080 was already a "fully populated" PCB as far as VRM circuitry goes, the same will definitely be true for the RTX 2080 Super as well. I have to assume NVIDIA is just driving their VRMs a bit harder, which shouldn't be an issue given what their cooler can do. It is noteworty though that as a result, the card's maximum power target is just +12%, or 280W. So while the card has a good bit of TDP headroom at stock, there isn't much more that can be added to it. Factoring in pass-through power for the VirtualLink port, and NVIDIA is right at the limit of what they can do over the 8pin + 6pin + slot power delivery configuration.
Finally, for display I/O, the card gets the continuing NVIDIA high-end standard of 3x DisplayPort 1.4, 1x HDMI 2.0b, and 1x VirtualLink port (DP video + USB data + 30W USB power).
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Qasar - Sunday, July 28, 2019 - link
the argument, seems to be ray tracing above all else... nvidia has it, amd doesnt, so why buy amd ?i personally.. dont care about ray tracing, as the games i play currently, dont have it, and i dont see any games i want to to play in the future, having it as well, and the fact, that the rtx series, is priced way out of my price range
milkod2001 - Friday, August 2, 2019 - link
Buying GPU which is a little loud is and keep it for 1-2 years is not exactly super pleasing especially in room with somebody else. I'd pay $100 extra only to not hear loud GPU.D. Lister - Saturday, August 3, 2019 - link
@DillholeMcRibSo you have decided to pay the AMD tax from your ears, instead of the Nvidia tax from your pocket. Fair enough. Enjoy your fewer features and driver bugs. :P
Outdoor Limited - Tuesday, August 6, 2019 - link
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Outdoor Limited - Tuesday, August 6, 2019 - link
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pikobupe - Monday, January 27, 2020 - link
Any chance in seeing an RTX enabled comparison between the various card levels? https://bigbootytube.xxx