Today NVIDIA launches its entry-level GeForce GTX Turing graphics card on Turing-Based 12nm “TU117” silicon, which is the smallest implementation of Turing for $149. It is the first entry-level Turing card, GTX 1050 successor but without RTX and DLSS support because it doesn’t have RT or Tensor cores at this given price GTX 1650 will compete RX 570 and RX 580 which is roughly sitting for the same price at the moment. According to NVIDIA it doesn’t even require an external power-connector. The GPU chip package consume less than 75 Watt which can be good for the ITX PC builders or entry-budget gamers who don’t want to spend much on power-supply.
NVIDIA GeForce GTX 16 “Turing” Series | |||
---|---|---|---|
GeForce GTX 1650 | GeForce GTX 1660 | GeForce GTX 1660 Ti | |
GPU | 12nm FF TU117-300 | 12nm FF TU116-300 | 12nm FF TU116-400 |
CUDA Cores |
896
|
1408
|
1536
|
Base Clock |
1485 MHz
|
1530 MHz
|
1500 MHz
|
Boost Clock |
1665 MHz
|
1785 MHz
|
1770 MHz
|
Memory |
4GB GDDR5
|
6GB GDDR5
|
6GB GDDR6
|
Memory Bus |
128-bit
|
192-bit
|
192-bit
|
Memory Clock |
8 Gbps
|
8 Gbps
|
12 Gbps
|
Bandwidth |
128 GB/s
|
192 GB/s
|
288 GB/s
|
MSRP |
149 USD
|
219 USD
|
279 USD
|
Launch Date | April 23rd | March 14th | February 22nd |