Conclusion
Conclusion
Ever since its release, we have been impressed with the GTX 470’s poise and performance in all of our tests. It has proven again and again that NVIDIA did hit the nail on the head when it came to designing the GF100 architecture even though power consumption does tend to be quite a bit higher than competing solutions. However, we have to remember that ATI has yet to release a tailor-made DX11 architecture so heaven only knows how efficiency will compare when the tessellation field is leveled.
When it comes to Gigabyte’s past offerings, stability is always the name of the game and their current NVIDIA lineup is certainly looking good with the upcoming addition of the Super Overclock series. Until that time, we’re happy to see Gigabyte joining the ranks of board partners that offer a wide variety of pre-overclocked products for customers looking for additional performance. When it comes to the OC Edition however we’re happily sitting on the fence since the clock speed increases it sports are less than impressive. A mere 27Mhz bump on the core without nary a memory speed increase results in an altogether meaningless performance difference in every single game. Calling a card “overclocked” seems to be great for the marketing and sales teams but it means next to nothing for the end user if they can’t see gameplay benefits.
That being said, we have to commend Gigabyte for continuing with an aggressive pricing structure on all of their 400-series products. Even though the OC Edition comes at a slight price premium over the reference card, this actually brings it into line with the vast majority of other stock-clocked GTX 470 cards on the market. The additional $10 to $15 for this card is actually quite fitting when you compare it to the extreme prices some other companies charge for their own overclocked cards. This in itself is praiseworthy and actually sets a precedent which other manufacturers would do well to follow.
Impressive performance, good overclocking potential and a good price are all hallmarks of most GTX 470 cards and Gigabyte’s OC version embodies all of these. Unfortunately, we find its minor clock speed increases don’t do anything other than push a marketable quality which will never benefit consumers in terms of actual performance. If the memory had received some attention or the capabilities of the core had been further pushed, we would have been singing a far different tune. As it stands, the GTX 470 OC is priced right but we would still recommend going with the excellently priced reference version from Gigabyte instead.
Pros:
- Very good performance
- Excellent overclocking potential
- Slight decrease in power consumption
- Quiet
- Well priced
Cons
- Extremely small clock speed increase
- 3-year warranty starts from manufacturing date, not purchase date
- Price premium is unjustified for the small performance difference