| Max Screen Resolution | 7680 x 4320 |
|---|---|
| Memory Speed | 8108 MHz |
| Graphics Coprocessor | Nvidia GeForce |
| Chipset Brand | Nvidia GeForce GTX 1070 |
| Graphics Card Ram Size | 8 GB |
MSI Gaming GeForce GTX 1070 8GB GDDR5 SLI DirectX 12 VR Ready Graphics Card (GTX 1070 GAMING X 8G)
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| Graphics Coprocessor | Nvidia GeForce |
| Brand | MSI |
| Graphics Ram Size | 8 GB |
| GPU Clock Speed | 1607 MHz |
| Chipset Brand | Nvidia GeForce GTX 1070 |
About this item
- Make sure this fits by entering your model number.
- Chipset: NVIDIA GeForce GTX 1070
- Video Memory: 8GB GDDR5 and card dimension(mm)-6-pin x 1, 8-pin x 1
- Memory Clock: 8108 MHz (oc mode) ; Memory 8GB GDDR5 (256-bit) , Interface: PCI Express x16 3.0. DirectX Version Support - 12, OpenGL Version Support- 4.5, Multi-GPU Technology - SLI, 2-Way
- Max. Resolution: 7680 x 4320, support 4x Display monitors
- Please Note: Kindly refer the User Guide before use.
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| Customer Rating | 4.6 out of 5 stars (1000) | 4.6 out of 5 stars (6397) | 4.7 out of 5 stars (975) | 4.7 out of 5 stars (462) | 4.3 out of 5 stars (875) | 4.7 out of 5 stars (1801) |
| Price | $259.99$259.99 | $188.99$188.99 | $324.32$324.32 | $333.00$333.00 | $288.77$288.77 | $279.99$279.99 |
| Sold By | RISING SUN SHOP | Amazon.com | ░░🆀🆄🅸🅲🅺 ᴵᵀ | RISING SUN SHOP | ░░🆀🆄🅸🅲🅺 ᴵᵀ | RISING SUN SHOP |
| Device Type | Graphics Cards | Graphic Cards | Graphics Cards | Graphic Cards | Graphics Cards | Graphics Cards |
| Graphics Card Interface | PCI Express | PCI-Express x16 | PCI Express | PCI Express | PCI Express | PCI Express |
| Graphics Coprocessor | Nvidia GeForce | NVIDIA GeForce GTX 1050 Ti | Nvidia GeForce | NVIDIA GeForce GTX 1070 | Nvidia GeForce | gddr5 |
| Graphics Ram Size | 8 GB | 4 GB | 8 GB | 8 GB | 8 GB | 6 GB |
| Graphics Ram | GDDR5 | GDDR5 | GDDR5 | GDDR5 | GDDR5 | GDDR5 |
| Hardware Interface | PCIE x 16 | PCI Express x8 | PCIE x 16 | PCIE x 16 | PCIE x 16 | PCIE x 16 |
| Included Components | Graphic card, cables and connectors, QIG | Graphics card, cables and connectors, quick setup guide | warranty card, user manual, software drivers | Graphics card, cables and connectors, quick setup guide | Graphics card, Manual | Video Card |
| Item Dimensions | 13.6 x 10.6 x 3.3 inches | 9.01 x 1.54 x 5.16 inches | 5.28 x 1.57 x 11.73 inches | 11 x 5.5 x 1.7 inches | 11 x 4.5 x 1.6 inches | 13.6 x 10.6 x 3.3 inches |
| Memory Bus Width | 256 bits | 128 bits | 256 bits | 256 bits | 256 bits | 256 bits |
| Memory Clock Speed | 8108 MHz | 7108 MHz | 1860 MHz | 1683 MHz | 8008 MHz | 8192 MHz |
| Style | GTX 1070 GAMING X 8G | GTX 1050 TI GAMING X 4G | GTX 1070 | GTX 1070 TI GAMING 8G | GTX 1070 G1 Gaming | GTX 1060 GAMING X 6G |
Product Description
MSI GeForce GTX 1070 GAMING X 8G Twin frozr VI thermal design raises the bar of graphics card Air cooling. Torx fan 2.0 is the enhanced version of the Patented torx fan technology which generates 22% more Air pressure for better cooling performance while further reducing noise levels. The new fans are equipped with double ball bearings to ensure lasting smooth and silent operation. Connected to the huge heat sink are 8mm copper heat Pipes with a squared shape at the bottom for optimal heat transfer from the solid nickel-plated copper baseplate combined with premium thermal compound x to keep the Pascal powerhouse cool.
From the manufacturer
Innovative TORX 2.0 Fan Technology
Just like in games, the exclusive MSI TORX 2.0 Fan technology uses the power of teamwork to allow the TWIN FROZR VI to achieve new levels of cool.
TORX 2.0 Fan design generates 22% more air pressure for supremely silent performance in the heat of battle.
Double Ball Bearings
Double Ball Bearings give the unique MSI TORX 2.0 Fans a strong and lasting core for years of smooth gaming. They also remain virtually silent while spinning under load, keeping your graphics card cool during intense and lengthy gaming sessions.
(MSI 1060 GAMING model does not have Double Ball Bearings).
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Premium Thermal Compound with Smooth Heat PipesEvery detail counts when it comes to creating the ultimate thermal design, which is why TWIN FROZR VI uses a premium thermal compound to make sure it outlives the competition. Also include up to 8mm thick copper heat pipes to maximize heat transfer. |
Customized LEDEach LED can be controlled individually by choosing any of the animation effects available in the MSI Gaming App, ranging from responding to your game sounds or music to steady light, breathing and flashing. Of course, you can also turn them off. |
Advance Zero Frozr TechnologyFirst introduced in 2008 by MSI, ZeroFrozr technology has made its mark and is now the industry standard among graphics cards. It eliminates fan noise by stopping the fans in low-load situations. This means you can focus on gaming without the noise of spinning fans. |
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| GeForce GTX 1080 GAMING X 8G | GeForce GTX 1070 GAMING X 8G | GeForce GTX 1070 GAMING 8G | GeForce GTX 1060 GAMING X 6G | |
| GPU | NVIDIA GeForce GTX 1080 | NVIDIA GeForce GTX 1070 | NVIDIA GeForce GTX 1070 | NVIDIA GeForce GTX 1060 |
| GPU Clock (Boost/Base) | (OC Mode 1847 MHz / 1708 MHz) (Gaming Mode 1822 MHz / 1683 MHz) (Silent Mode 1733 MHz / 1607 MHz) | (OC Mode 1797 MHz / 1607 MHz) (Gaming Mode 1771 MHz / 1582 MHz) (Silent Mode 1683 MHz / 1506 MHz) | (OC Mode 1721 MHz / 1531 MHz) (Gaming Mode 1708 MHz / 1518 MHz) (Silent Mode 1683 MHz / 1506 MHz) | (OC Mode 1809 MHz / 1594 MHz) (Gaming Mode 1784 MHz / 1569 MHz) (Silent Mode 1708 MHz / 1506 MHz) |
| Memory | 8GB GDDR5X | 8GB GDDR5 | 8GB GDDR5 | 6GB GDDR5 |
| Memory Clock (Up To) | 10108 MHz | 8108 MHz | 8008 MHz | 8100 MHz |
| Bus | PCI Express x16 3.0 | PCI Express x16 3.0 | PCI Express x16 3.0 | PCI Express x16 3.0 |
| Cuda Cores | 2560 Units | 1920 Units | 1920 Units | 1280 Units |
| Memory Interface | 256 bits | 256 bits | 256 bits | 192 bits |
| SLI | 2-way | 2-way | 2-way | n/a |
| Display Output | DisplayPort x 3 (Version 1.4) / HDMI (Version 2.0) / DL-DVI-D | DisplayPort x 3 (Version 1.4) / HDMI (Version 2.0) / DL-DVI-D | DisplayPort x 3 (Version 1.4) / HDMI (Version 2.0) / DL-DVI-D | DisplayPort x 3 (Version 1.4) / HDMI (Version 2.0) / DL-DVI-D |
| Double Ball Bearings | Yes | Yes | Yes | No |
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What's in the box
Product information
Technical Details
| Brand | MSI |
|---|---|
| Series | GeForce GTX 1070 GAMING X 8G |
| Item model number | GTX 1070 GAMING X 8G |
| Hardware Platform | PC |
| Item Weight | 3 pounds |
| Product Dimensions | 13.6 x 10.6 x 3.3 inches |
| Item Dimensions LxWxH | 13.6 x 10.6 x 3.3 inches |
| Manufacturer | MSI COMPUTER |
| ASIN | B01GXOX3SW |
| Is Discontinued By Manufacturer | No |
| Date First Available | June 11, 2016 |
Additional Information
| Customer Reviews |
4.6 out of 5 stars |
|---|---|
| Best Sellers Rank | #571 in Computer Graphics Cards |
Warranty & Support
Feedback
Customer reviews
Customer Reviews, including Product Star Ratings help customers to learn more about the product and decide whether it is the right product for them.
To calculate the overall star rating and percentage breakdown by star, we don’t use a simple average. Instead, our system considers things like how recent a review is and if the reviewer bought the item on Amazon. It also analyzed reviews to verify trustworthiness.
Learn more how customers reviews work on AmazonReviewed in the United States on August 6, 2016
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Eventually, under reasonable circumstances within budget, I purchased two MSI GTX 1070 cards for SLI. I can only say that I am very, very well pleased, and absolutely impressed. Despite not having a HB SLI bridge, I was able to successfully increase scaling with two Flex - and eventually two rigid - SLI bridges. Now, I can't say that I've compared single to dual card setups, but I know that compared to my 980, I can play nearly all AAA titles maxed out at 4K 60FPS. There are some exceptions for games that don't naturally support SLI, like the new DOOM, but even with a single card it manages to hit the high 50s and occasional 60FPS. This is still acceptable where G-Sync comes in to play - I don't feel a stutter. Some games I can even force AFR2 in the Nvidia Control Panel, and I can squeeze some more frames out it; again, with G-Sync in effect, I'm not noticing any major or noticeable stuttering/issues.
I've only had this set up in my test rig for a couple days as of the initial posting of this review, so I can't say much else. One 'snag' that I've run into with some EA titles, launched via EA Origin, is that they can only be run in Window/Borderless. Fullscreen seems to make the screen go black, so I've got to alt-tab and manually click in the game settings (or use a 3rd party program) to adjust the settings. Even with an expected performance hit in this mode, I don't get anything less than 60FPS, maxed out. Battlefront in 4K 60FPS is such a beautiful thing, that I don't mind the little hassle (and a happy tear rolls down from my eye). In the future, I expect a driver update to fix this issue: other games, like SC2, where the games appear to be natively borderless, there isn't an issue. I'm trying to test and see which of these games are giving me problems, but the problem goes away as soon as I force borderless via in-game settings or via 3rd party software. It mainly might be SLI-ready titles, but I haven't had enough time with the cards to figure that out yet.
As mentioned, I am running this in a test rig - open frame, with no practical air pressure, so the fans seem to be working a little extra hard to draw in air. With the two cards "sandwiched" together, GPU1 (top card) occasionally hits 85C, with GPU2 (bottom card) sitting comfortably at 65C during full load. Some games it is lower than that; have not seen anything higher than that in EVGA Precision X. It does get a tad bit loud, but I suspect that once I have this in a proper case and add the appropriate fans in the ideal locations for airflow, this issue will be reduced. I also plan to remove the lower portion of the backplate of GPU2 (which I've seen is purely aesthetic) to allow more air to reach GPU1.
These beauties are not even overclocked yet.
But I'm already very happy with the performance.
Should I have waited for the AIB board partners for a lower MSRP? Maybe. I've always like the rear-exhaust styled, slick-appearance of the reference designs; now known as the Founder's Edition. In my SFF mATX setup, I figure I need them to expel hot air out of the case rather than dump hot air within the case. Either way, I am thrilled with my purchase.
Lastly, which I feel is a huge bonus, is that I've noticed consistently that with Precision X's profiles active, the card will boost past its advertised/rated boost clock, right out of the box. TO BE FAIR: I've set EVGA Precision X to set Power Target max and Temp Target max, with priority pointed to Power Target. With a fan profile that somewhat prioritizes lower noise over heat, I am reading 1835Mhz on BOTH cards in most SLI-Ready games. Granted, boost clock will boost as high as it can within a reasonable limit as long as temperatures are under control, but this is still pretty sweet. I'm getting a nice +135Mhz over the advertised 1683Mhz without having to do anything, even at 85C for GPU1.
I'll update this post when I've got it in my main build, with the appropriate airflow configuration, possibly with overclock results... and with the latter portion of the backplate on GPU2 removed for GPU1 temp testing.
RMA through MSI yielded an excellent card; rating updated to 4 stars as we since moved to EVGA GTX 1080 Ti SC2 units. I kept the replacement unit for my personal i7 4Ghz 980x/24GB RAM/SSD home office/editing/gaming system.
For 1440P, its awesome, but for gaming at max settings, a GTX 1080 is best. For 4k, go for a GTX 1080 Ti.
DISREGARD BELOW REVIEW UNLESS YOU ENCOUNTER BLACKSCREENS; WE SIMPLY HAD A BAD CARD.
This review pertains particularly to the MSI Armor GTX 1070 8GB OC, and in no way relates to any other MSI product. My company films/edits/delivers tv/web/radio ads using Adobe CC Suite 2014/2017 products and also utilizes Davinci Resolve Pro, we shoot/edit RAW in 1080p and 4k, and deliver content at broadcast specs. We do not overclock our GPU units, only processors and RAM, and thus far I haven't even started the OC test process on this new build, and encountered the same problems with this unit, which I also tested on our current main Windows 7 Pro Asus/intel x58 based i7 980x with 24GB 1600Mhz RAM at 4.0Ghz with GTX 660 2GB, as well as our Windows 7 Pro Asus/Intel x58 i7 950 with 12GB 1600Mhz RAM at 4.2Ghz, typically using a GTX 460 1GB. Both units are connected via DP1.2 to identical 27" Acer 1440P IPS displays. The MSI Armor GTX 1070 OC unit exhibits the exact same problems on both x58, Windows 7 systems as that i encountered on the new Windows 10 Anniversary edition Z270 system i built recently, on a 3rd identical display as well as a Samsung 4k 8000 series UHD HDR 60Hz television.
This is the first time I have had issues with any MSI graphics card, or ANY graphics card, including now-defunct Galaxy Tech with a single-slot GTX 460 Razer 1GB and standard 2 slot GTX 660 2GB, and even a GTX 9800+ OC 512MB from also-defunct BFG Tech.
The GTX 9800+ OC is woefully outdated but lives in my home desktop (we don't game, it's a media center x58 i7 920 12GB Windows 7 setup for movies/tv/web at 1080p). The GTX 460 and GTX 660 are not supported by Adobe CC Suite 2017, which we planned to use for our main workhorse, so I chose this MSI Armor GTX 1070 8GB OC for the new build.
All current work Windows 7 PC systems utilize 1TB Samsung 850 Evo drives as boot/program/media drives on SATA II, twin 500GB 850 EVO as render/export/cache in RAID0 on SATA II, and ARECA 8 DISK HDD RAID6 arrays for mass storage and backups.
This was purchased for our/my new editing machine, which comprises an ASUS STRIX Z270e motherboard, 32GB G.SKILL DDR4 3466Mhz RAM, an Intel i7 7700k tested at 4.2 stock speed, albeit with a 1TB Samsung Evo 960 NVMe boot/programs/media SSD, and another 1TB Samsung Evo 960 NVMe for render/export/cache. I have total reliability with this build up to 5Ghz with the GTX 660 2GB and GTX 460 1GB, bur chose not to bother trying with the MSI ARMOR as it's faulty, and I don't feel confident I have the overclock undervolted properly.
All 3 systems use Corsair Hydro H110i with 4 fans at maximum speed, temps are low and stable for processors, RAM, and other bits. All systems are in Cooler Master HAF932 cases eith plenty of fans set to maximum speed.
I tested every variable, driver, hardware configuration and saw no extreme temperature issues; appears to be a fluke part.
This particular sample was purchased for Adobe CC Suite 2017 render/CUDA acceleration duties, as well as DaVinci Resolve Pro for grading; again at only stock speeds, and no matter what, suffered random display driver crashes (again multiple drivers, ports, hardware and software versions tested, NO overclockson GPU or PCIe). Power supplies are 3 identical tried and true 850w Gold rated Corsair units.
Also random black screen during any usage over 80% on render/export, temps are fine per logs, but screen flashes and goes black 5-10 minutes in, where a reboot was necessary, or reboot plus switching DP cable to a different DP output on the graphics card. Tested on a DP 1.4, 144hz gaming 1080p monitor an employee brought in to help troubleshoot as well, also multiple cables, new and old. Always same result.
Any time the unit was stressed with effects, within 5-10 minutes, black screen/flickering/failed driver, and ruined render/export.
I believe I recieved a bad unit; i rated only 2 stars because MSI support made me wait for almost an hour to eventually tell me to 'just return it, grt another one or get something else and see if that works'...
Which, for a work environment where we strive to shoot/edit/deliver in 48 hours or less, does NOT work.
Top reviews from other countries
Reviewed in Mexico 🇲🇽 on August 6, 2016
PROS :
- Very silent. Most of the time, the fan ain't even spinning at all, so needless to say that is pretty silent. Even when gaming, I don't hear it over the the sound of my Noctua cooler with my headset on (or off, actually). I downloaded the MSI Afterburner software today and tested the fan at 100% in manual mode. Man it gets loud but fortunately, it never goes to that point on automatic mode.
- Easy to install. It was my first PC build and the only trouble I got while installing the GPU was being stupid enough to try plugging the damn motherboard power cable instead of the PCI-E. Installing is as easy as putting it in its slot, screwing and plugging in, when you kinda know what you are doing.
- Very good looking. The reason why I chose the Gaming X over the Shield was because I find it extremely attractive with its twin FROZR fans and red fan frame.
CON :
- The only thing I don't like about this GPU (and most of the other MSI products as a matter of fact) is MysticLight. The GPU has RGB lights around the fans and the MSI logo but they are dim and poorly customizable in the software. Compared to ASUS Aura, it's horrible. I prefer the jazz setting, since I think it changes the lights with the sound of the media, but I'm not even sure, honestly it looks kinda random and only changes the brightness of the lights (not that much).
Overall it is an excellent graphics card and I don't regret buying it in discount after the black friday.
I've contacted MSI to see if they can do anything for me, but I have the inkling of a feeling that the Warranty is only 36 months because I've had mine for 42.8 I've just snuck by the Warranty period. Not sure if that's just bad luck or planned obsoleteness on MSI's behalf.
The only work around is to underclock your GPU unfortunately. I'll update my review when I hear back from them.
EDIT:
They told me I was shit out of luck. Card still chugging along though. Pretty hilarious I bought it for $569.99 in 2017 and now it's $999.99.
Installation was a breeze, but I did have to move one of my hard drives because the length of the card makes it difficult to access the drives connectors if they are lined up. The card is pretty long, so one should check for sufficient back clearing in the case.
Very happy with this card and gsync is nice too!





























