Skip to main content

EVGA goes quiet and cool with the new GTX 1070 graphics card line

Although Nvidia may have unveiled quite a competitive mid- to high-range graphics card with its GTX 1070 reference card, the partner companies, of course, have their own ideas about what the graphics processing unit (GPU) should be. EVGA’s first take on the card gave it a new lighting system and its ACX 3.0 cooler design, which should improve noise and cooling performance.

As with the graphics card announcements from the likes of MSI, EVGA’s GTX 1070 comes in four distinct flavors. The first is the near-reference Founders Edition, which uses the same cooling and styling of all the third-party manufacturers who offer the same version. It comes in clocked at 1,506MHz, boosted to 1,683 on the core, and a memory clock of 8,000MHz.

evga107002
Image used with permission by copyright holder

All of those specifications are almost identical for the EVGA GTX 1070 Gaming ACX 3.0, apart from a memory clock that is bumped slightly to 8,008MHz. You’d never be able to tell from the outside, though. It ditches the Founders shroud for a bespoke EVGA design, which features twin fan coolers over a large aluminium heatsink. Those fans only spin up when needed, keeping the card very quiet otherwise, and feature double ball bearing centers, so should have a “400 percent longer lifespan,” according to an EVGA release.

A new heatpipe design is said to allow for a 10 percent improvement in cooling potential through better conductivity, and memory is said to operate at a lower temperature thanks to a PCB wide heatsink that cools both the memory and GPU mosfets.

Get your weekly teardown of the tech behind PC gaming
Check your inbox!

The ACX 3.0 cooling system also supports RGB LED lighting, which shines through the grill sections to offer a customized and unique-looking graphics card.

This card is also available in a Superclocked Gaming edition. It features the same cooling system as the standard gaming edition, but its core clock is bumped up to 1,594MHz which boosts up to 1,784MHz.

Everything else is the same. Where things potentially get interesting, though, is with the GTX 1070 FTW Gaming version. Although that features the same specifications as the others in most respects, we don’t know what its core clock speeds are right now. It’s presumably higher than the Superclocked version, but we’ll have to wait and see.

We’re also waiting on pricing and availability information, which should be coming soon.

Editors' Recommendations

Jon Martindale
Jon Martindale is the Evergreen Coordinator for Computing, overseeing a team of writers addressing all the latest how to…
Graphics cards are selling again, and that worries me
The RTX 4080 logo on a pink background.

GPUs are selling again. Ever since the GPU shortage, graphics cards haven't been selling well, but a recent report from Jon Peddie Research shows that trend is changing. The report shows that GPU shipments increased by 16.8% compared to last quarter, which is a positive sign.  Still, I can't help but feel worried about what this could mean for GPU prices.

Both AMD and Nvidia came out of the pandemic highs with new ranges of graphics cards. Nvidia set the bar with pricing higher than we've ever seen before, and AMD quickly followed, pricing its cards just low enough to be considered a value by comparison. That's made the price of building a new gaming PC higher than it's ever been.

Read more
Nvidia is ‘no longer a graphics company’
NVIDIA CEO Jensen Huang on stage.

It's no secret that Nvidia has quickly morphed into an AI company. Although it creates some of the best graphics cards for PC gamers, the company's supercomputing efforts have catapulted it into being a trillion-dollar company, and that transformation was spurred on by the monumental rise of ChatGPT. That shift, from a graphics company to an AI company, was intentional choice by Nvidia's CEO Jensen Huang.

In a moment of saying the quiet part out loud, Greg Estes, the vice president of corporate marketing at Nvidia, said: "[Jensen] sent out an email on Friday evening saying everything is going to deep learning, and that we were no longer a graphics company. By Monday morning, we were an AI company. Literally, it was that fast."

Read more
Nvidia’s new GPUs could be right around the corner
Nvidia's RTX 4070 graphics cards over a pink background.

Is Nvidia really about to add to its lineup of top GPUs? All signs point to yes, and now, we have an official Nvidia keynote on the horizon that tells us when we might hear more about the rumored RTX 40 Super. Nvidia revealed that it's going to deliver a special address on January 8 as part of CES 2024. Although the company hasn't confirmed what it's planning to cover, the rumor mill has been buzzing with information about three new desktop GPUs. But will they really be worth the upgrade?

Several reputable leakers have weighed in on the matter of the RTX 40-series refresh, and we've been getting updates about the range for a few weeks now. Nvidia doesn't need to specifically state that it'll talk about these graphics cards, as that is going to be the expectation anyway. The three GPUs in question are the RTX 4080 Super, RTX 4070 Ti Super, and the RTX 4070 Super.

Read more