This is just a little bit of subjective feedback that might help anyone considering a GPU upgrade now the bitcoin boom has died down.
I built a new PC in March last year, carrying over my existing GPU & PSU from the old one. I planned to buy a new card a few months later but the prices went too high & so I've stuck with my Asus GTX 970 OC for much longer than I planned to. I've just fitted an EVGA 1080ti FTW3 into my existing system:
Intel i7 7700 (not K)
16Gb PC2133 DDR4 SDRAM
Gigabyte Z270 motherboard
500Gb m.2 SSD (not NVME)
AOC 2460PF 24" full HD monitor
There are other accessories including two more monitors but nothing relevant to ED
It's all wrapped up in a Phanteks Enthoo Pro case, it's nicely made & thoughtfully designed, bigger than I need right now but I have the room, I'm really happy with it.
Playing ED I'm not CPU or RAM limited, my CPU sits around 40-45% usage while playing, rising to around 70% at most in a CZ or busy station instance so the mobo, CPU & RAM aren't overclocked at all atm.
With the GTX 970 I tended to overclock it to around 1450 core, and only a slight memory increase from 7010 stock to 7040. Over several years this light overclock was stable, if I pushed it much more the temps would start to rise without much benefit.
I would normally run ED in full HD with no custom tweaks, just everything maxed out in the in-game graphics settings & 1.0 supersampling. Landed on a planet with the SRV having just dropped down (pointing at the belly of my Conda) is the most taxing scenario repeatable for me, so I'll use that to compare.
Normally I'd see a drop to just below 60fps on the 970, with graphics memory peaking at around 3.7GB.
Switching the DSR factor from 1.0 to 4.0 (4k resolution downscaled to full HD) I'd see 28fps with the headlights on, 30 with them off.
After installing the new card, with 4.0DSR I'm seeing 90fps lights on, just under 100fps lights off, and just shy of 5Gb graphics memory usage.
The DSR factor is effectively giving me pretty expensive anti-aliasing and the image quality is much improved, the occasional stutters have completely disappeared (for now, it's only been a few hours) and the CPU & RAM usage are unchanged.
The 970 is an excellent card for full HD resolution, but the 4GB RAM was starting to become an issue. The 1080ti is both a generation newer & a couple of steps further up the range, but at £719 delivered I'm happy with the price/performance ratio.
Fingers crossed this one will remain useful for as long as the 970 did. It's now sitting in my son's PC, replacing his 2GB 750ti.
I built a new PC in March last year, carrying over my existing GPU & PSU from the old one. I planned to buy a new card a few months later but the prices went too high & so I've stuck with my Asus GTX 970 OC for much longer than I planned to. I've just fitted an EVGA 1080ti FTW3 into my existing system:
Intel i7 7700 (not K)
16Gb PC2133 DDR4 SDRAM
Gigabyte Z270 motherboard
500Gb m.2 SSD (not NVME)
AOC 2460PF 24" full HD monitor
There are other accessories including two more monitors but nothing relevant to ED
It's all wrapped up in a Phanteks Enthoo Pro case, it's nicely made & thoughtfully designed, bigger than I need right now but I have the room, I'm really happy with it.
Playing ED I'm not CPU or RAM limited, my CPU sits around 40-45% usage while playing, rising to around 70% at most in a CZ or busy station instance so the mobo, CPU & RAM aren't overclocked at all atm.
With the GTX 970 I tended to overclock it to around 1450 core, and only a slight memory increase from 7010 stock to 7040. Over several years this light overclock was stable, if I pushed it much more the temps would start to rise without much benefit.
I would normally run ED in full HD with no custom tweaks, just everything maxed out in the in-game graphics settings & 1.0 supersampling. Landed on a planet with the SRV having just dropped down (pointing at the belly of my Conda) is the most taxing scenario repeatable for me, so I'll use that to compare.
Normally I'd see a drop to just below 60fps on the 970, with graphics memory peaking at around 3.7GB.
Switching the DSR factor from 1.0 to 4.0 (4k resolution downscaled to full HD) I'd see 28fps with the headlights on, 30 with them off.
After installing the new card, with 4.0DSR I'm seeing 90fps lights on, just under 100fps lights off, and just shy of 5Gb graphics memory usage.
The DSR factor is effectively giving me pretty expensive anti-aliasing and the image quality is much improved, the occasional stutters have completely disappeared (for now, it's only been a few hours) and the CPU & RAM usage are unchanged.
The 970 is an excellent card for full HD resolution, but the 4GB RAM was starting to become an issue. The 1080ti is both a generation newer & a couple of steps further up the range, but at £719 delivered I'm happy with the price/performance ratio.
Fingers crossed this one will remain useful for as long as the 970 did. It's now sitting in my son's PC, replacing his 2GB 750ti.