Performance Rating
The GeForce GTX 260 was a high-end graphics card by NVIDIA, launched on June 16th, 2008. Built on the 65 nm process, and based on the GT200 graphics processor, in its G200-100-A2 variant, the card supports DirectX 11.1. Even though it supports DirectX 11, the feature level is only 10_0, which can be problematic with many DirectX 11 & DirectX 12 titles. The GT200 graphics processor is a large chip with a die area of 576 mm² and 1,400 million transistors. Unlike the fully unlocked GeForce GTX 280, which uses the same GPU but has all 240 shaders enabled, NVIDIA has disabled some shading units on the GeForce GTX 260 to reach the product's target shader count. It features 192 shading units, 64 texture mapping units, and 28 ROPs. NVIDIA has paired 896 MB GDDR3 memory with the GeForce GTX 260, which are connected using a 448-bit memory interface. The GPU is operating at a frequency of 576 MHz, memory is running at 999 MHz.
Contents:
Memory ML Performance Compute Power Architecture & Compatibility ML Software Support Clocks & Performance Power Consumption Rendering AdditionalMemory
Memory Size
Memory Type
Memory Bandwidth
Memory Bus Width
ML Performance
FP16 (Half Precision)
BF16 (Brain Float)
TF32 (TensorFloat)
Compute Power
FP32 (Single Precision)
FP64 (Double Precision)
CUDA Cores
RT Cores
Architecture & Compatibility
GPU Architecture
SM (Streaming Multiprocessor)
PCIe Version
ML Software Support
CUDA Version
Clocks & Performance
Base Clock
Boost Clock
Memory Clock
Power Consumption
TDP/TGP
Recommended PSU
Power Connector
Additional
Slots
Release Date
Display Outputs
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