Saturday, April 20, 2024

Nvidia RTX 3070 vs. RTX 2080 Ti: Can a mid-range GPU beat the best of last-gen?

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Nvidia’s new-generation RTX 3000-series graphics cards are stupendously powerful, from the flagship RTX 3080 to the even more monstrous 8K-capable RTX 3090. But the RTX 3070 is arguably the most exciting of its generation, with enough power to handle 4K gaming at great frame rates, with ray tracing enabled, too. It might even be able to challenge the last-generation flagship, the RTX 2080 Ti.

To find out, we pitted these two cards in a classic head-to-head to see which one comes out on top.

Pricing and availability

The RTX 2080 Ti debuted in September 2018 with a price of $1,200 for the Founder’s Edition. Custom versions had a base price of $1,000, and those with lower frequencies and weaker cooling weren’t much more than that. The most expensive, custom versions could stretch to between $1,400 and $1,900.

At the end of 2020, the 2080 Ti is no longer being manufactured. That makes the stock of new cards extremely limited and prices far outside of the norm — not recommendable. Secondhand versions cost anywhere between $600 and $750 at the time of writing. If you can find one closer to $600, it may be worth considering, depending on your wants and needs.

Nvidia unveiled the RTX 3070 on September 1 alongside the RTX 3080 and 3090. It will release sometime in October, with a Founders Edition price of $500. Custom versions will likely be more costly.

Performance

The RTX 3070 might be the baby of the Ampere generation for now, but it’s still stupendously powerful. Nvidia has made amazing claims about its capabilities, suggesting it could rival the 2080 Ti in a number of scenarios. We’ll need to wait until it’s released and third-parties have provided unbiased, objective benchmark results to know for sure, but we can make some estimations based on its specifications and what Nvidia has shown us so far.

RTX 3070
RTX 2080 Ti
GPU
GA104-300
TU102-300-K1-A1
Interface
PCI Express 4.0
PCI Express 3.0
CUDA cores
5,888
4,352
Tensor cores
184
544
RT cores
46
68
Base clock
1,500MHz
1,350MHz
Boost clock
1,725MHz
1,545MHz
Memory
8GB GDDR6
11GB GDDR6 at 14Gbps
Memory speed
14Gbps
14Gps
Memory interface
256-bit
352-bit
Bandwidth
448GBps
616GBps
TDP
220W
260W

The specs table paints an interesting picture of these two cards, showing that despite being two years older and based on a last-generation architecture, it still holds some advantages.

The RTX 3070 has a far greater CUDA core count, but it’s not quite as simple as the numbers suggest. The RTX 3000-series includes its INT32 cores in the count, as they can also operate as more typical FP32 CUDA cores when needed. That means that the RTX 3070 has 2,944 typical CUDA cores and an additional 2,944 that can be used for the same purpose.

The RTX 2080 Ti has 4,352 (FP32) CUDA cores and an additional 4,352 INT32 cores. That means that it has significantly more CUDA cores in total than the RTX 3070, but they are less versatile. They’re also based on a last-generation design and operate at a lower clock speed, so in many games, the RTX 3070 could well pull ahead — especially when it can leverage more of its multi-faceted cores for FP32 calculations. The RTX 2080 Ti isn’t a slouch, though, and in INT32-heavy games and scenarios, it could well hold a performance lead.

Nvidia claims the 3070 is the faster card, but that may not always be the case.

Its greater memory capacity and memory bus mean the 2080 Ti has significantly more memory bandwidth, too. That’s unlikely to play a huge part at lower resolutions like 1080p and 1440p, but at 4K, which the 2080 Ti is specifically designed for, it could make a real difference. Some games already demand up to 10GB at 4K, so the 2080 Ti may well hold a performance advantage over the 3070 in particular AAA games at 4K in the near future.

Riley Young/Digital Trends

PCI Express 4.0 is a nice addition for the RTX 3070, but since the RTX 2080 Ti didn’t saturate a 16x PCI Express 3.0 slot, it won’t amount to much more than helping to free up lanes on motherboards for additional add-in cards and storage drives.

Ray tracing and DLSS

One area that the RTX 3070 should hold a real advantage is in ray tracing. Although it has fewer RT cores, they are second-generation, which operate at 1.7 times the performance of their predecessors. All else being equal, that would give the 3070 the equivalent of 78 first-generation RT cores. A 15% uptick in RT performance over the RTX 2080 Ti is nothing to sniff at.

Tensor core performance for deep learning super sampling could be comparable between the two, with the RTX 3070 leveraging a third-generation Tensor core design, which can operate at up to 2.7 times the performance of the 2080 Ti’s first generation. Both can take full advantage of DLSS 2.0 for smart upscaling, however, making them both capable 4K cards.

Power and cooling

The RTX 3090 and 3080 enjoy a full, new-generation cooler design from Nvidia, with a push-pull fan configuration across a larger internal heatsink and a newly-designed PCB. The RTX 3070 looks set to be much more traditional, with no V-shaped cutout for the Founders Edition PCB and a dual-fan configuration. It clearly draws inspiration from Nvidia’s new cooler design, however, which has proved impressively capable on the RTX 3080.

With a power draw of 220W, it’s much more demanding than its 2070 counterpart, but 30W less so than the 2080 Ti, which demands 250W in the Founders Edition.

The 2080Ti’s cooler is perfectly adequate, offering enough performance to help the card hit its boost clock without getting too loud. Custom fan curves can help improve performance or noise levels, depending on your preference.

The future’s here, but don’t discount the dethroned king

The RTX 3070 is likely to be the better graphics card moving forward. Its performance should be close to, if not comparable to, the 2080 Ti in most settings, and as new architectures take better advantage of its second- and third-generation RT and tensor cores, it may regularly surpass it. It’s possible that the memory limitations of the 3070 will make it better suited to high frame rate 1440p than 4K in the longer term, but if you knock off some of the higher resolution textures, keeping within its 8GB should be more than doable for the foreseeable future.

There’s also the major matter of price and availability. The 3070 isn’t in stock yet, but it soon will be and will remain that way for at least a year and probably two, at around $500. The 2080 Ti is almost nonexistent new and certainly at nothing close to that kind of price. A secondhand one that has been well cared for at $500 to $600 is still a great buy, and one worth considering if you don’t want to wait for the 3070 stock to become stable enough to actually buy one.

Long-term, though? The 3070 will almost certainly be the card to get.

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