Gigabyte GeForce GTX 1060 G1 Gaming 6GB Review | https://cmcdistribution.com.vn/en

Gigabyte GeForce GTX 1060 G1 Gaming 6GB Review

Manufacturer: Gigabyte
UK price (as reviewed):
£275.48 (inc VAT)
US price (as reviewed): $289.99 (ex Tax)

The GTX 1060 6GB occupies roughly the same price bracket that the GTX 970 did in the last generation of cards, although it hasn’t been met with quite the same critical reception as the latter card due to significant price-performance pressure from AMD’s RX 480 SKUs, which saw Nvidia release the cheaper GTX 1060 3GB that cuts back on both core count and memory to reach a lower price point. Nonetheless, Nvidia’s board partners have of course been capitalising on the GTX 1060, as Gigabyte has done here with its G1 Gaming variant, which retails for £280; about £50 or 20 percent more than you could expect to pay for a standard version of the GTX 1060 6GB.

Gigabyte GeForce GTX 1060 G1 Gaming 6GB Review
Click to enlarge
The GTX 1060 G1 Gaming is a pretty big card at 278mm long. That said, it’s otherwise a pretty standard dual-slot card in terms of size, and will fit into most cases with ease. Having a big cooler strapped to a GPU with modest power consumption should also mean low temperatures and low noise.

Gigabyte GeForce GTX 1060 G1 Gaming 6GB Review
Click to enlarge
The cooler shroud is made predominantly from black plastic with a few orange highlights. The build quality here is fine but can hardly be called premium, but the metal backplate is more so and adds plenty of structural integrity.

Gigabyte GeForce GTX 1060 G1 Gaming 6GB Review
Click to enlarge
The card retains the reference display outputs meaning we’re looking at a trio of DisplayPort 1.4 headers, one HDMI 2.0 port and one DVI-D connector. Where we do see a deviation is the power connector – the single 8-pin PCI-E header will provide more than enough juice for any realistic overclock, and a small LED indicator is used to show that power is being received correctly. Those familiar with the GTX 1060 will know that it doesn’t support SLI, so the absence of any connectors is a given.

Gigabyte GeForce GTX 1060 G1 Gaming 6GB Review
Click to enlarge
The card is factory overclocked to 1,595MHz base and 1,810MHz boost clocks; a six percent increase on reference speeds. That said, with the free Xtreme Engine utility, you can easily put the card into OC Mode (1,621MHz base, 1,836MHz boost), which is almost eight percent higher than stock, although exact boost speeds will vary. We’ve tested in OC Mode as this is readily available out of the box even if it’s not the true default, but there’s also an Eco Mode which drops the base clock to the reference speed of 1,506MHz, giving us a boost of 1,721MHz. As a G1 Gaming card, all the GPUs used have been binned through Gigabyte’s GPU Gauntlet Sorting programme – details of this aren’t shared but hopefully we’ll see some solid overclocked numbers. Unfortunately, no memory overclock has been applied.

Gigabyte GeForce GTX 1060 G1 Gaming 6GB Review
Click to enlarge
The custom cooler is a Windforce 2X design sporting dual 90mm fans. The fans spin in different directions to one another, a feature Gigabyte has cleverly named Alternate Spinning Fan Design, and the blades have a unique design said to boost airflow. 3D Active Fan is Gigabyte’s way of saying the card is semi-passive, with the fans switching off entirely once the GPU is cool enough (typically below 60°C). The ‘Fan Stop’ logo along the top edge will light up when this is the case. Both this and the Gigabyte logo are lit by RGB LEDs, which you can control through the Xtreme Engine software.

Gigabyte GeForce GTX 1060 G1 Gaming 6GB Review
Click to enlarge
Power is delivered through a 6+1 phase power system; very beefy for this level of GPU and a considerable upgrade over the reference 3+1 design. It’s common for companies to use upgraded components in their premium card designs, and the GTX 1060 G1 Gaming is no different, receiving the full complement of Ultra Durable PCB components. This sees the PCB itself as well as the capacitors, chokes and MOSFETs all being upgraded in certain ways compared to normal ones. Gigabyte also uses what it calls Tier 1 memory, suggesting another type of binning process is in use.

Gigabyte GeForce GTX 1060 G1 Gaming 6GB Review
Click to enlarge
The GP106 GPU is tiny, and it only needs two direct touch 6mm heat pipes to fully cover it. There are two fin stacks in the large cooler: one which draws heat away from the GPU and memory chips (via a contact plate and thermal pads) and a secondary one that is fed by the aforementioned heat pipes and also absorbs heat from the MOSFETs and chokes, again via thermal padding. The cooler shroud is fairly closed but not completely, and air will mainly be expelled towards your motherboard or back into your case thanks to the vertical arrangement of the fins.

Specifications

  • Graphics processor Nvidia GeForce GTX 1060 6GB, 1,621MHz (1,836MHz boost)
  • Pipeline 1,280 stream processors, 80 texture units, 48 ROPs
  • Memory 6GB GDDR5, 8GHz effective
  • Bandwidth 192GB/sec, 192-bit interface
  • Compatibility DirectX 12, Vulcan, OpenGL 4.5
  • Outputs/Inputs 3 x DisplayPort 1.4, Dual Link DVI-I, 1 x HDMI 2.0b
  • Power connections 1 x 8-pin PCI-E, top-mounted
  • Size 278mm long, 114mm tall, dual-slot
  • Warranty Three years

The GTX 1060 6GB occupies roughly the same monetary value bracket that the GTX 970 did in the death coevals of cards, although it has n’t been met with quite the same critical reception as the latter circuit board due to significant price-performance coerce from AMD ‘s RX 480 SKUs, which saw Nvidia release the cheaper GTX 1060 3GB that cuts back on both core count and memory to reach a lower price point. Nonetheless, Nvidia ‘s board partners have of course been capitalising on the GTX 1060, as Gigabyte has done here with its G1 Gaming discrepancy, which retails for £280 ; about £50 or 20 percentage more than you could expect to pay for a criterion adaptation of the GTX 1060 6GB.The GTX 1060 G1 Gaming is a pretty big wag at 278mm long. That said, it ‘s otherwise a reasonably standard dual-slot circuit board in terms of size, and will fit into most cases with still. Having a big cooler strapped to a GPU with modest power consumption should besides mean broken temperatures and moo noise.The cool pall is made predominantly from black plastic with a few orange highlights. The build up timbre here is fine but can hardly be called premium, but the metal backplate is more so and adds enough of structural integrity.The card retains the reference display outputs meaning we ‘re looking at a trio of DisplayPort 1.4 headers, one HDMI 2.0 port and one DVI-D connection. Where we do see a deviation is the power connection – the single 8-pin PCI-E header will provide more than enough juice for any naturalistic overclock, and a small LED index is used to show that baron is being received correctly. Those familiar with the GTX 1060 will know that it does n’t support SLI, so the absence of any connectors is a given.The card is factory overclocked to 1,595MHz root and 1,810MHz hike clocks ; a six percentage increase on address speeds. That said, with the barren Xtreme Engine utility, you can well put the poster into OC Mode ( 1,621MHz base, 1,836MHz boost ), which is about eight percentage higher than livestock, although exact boost speeds will vary. We ‘ve tested in OC Mode as this is readily available out of the box even if it ‘s not the true default, but there ‘s besides an Eco Mode which drops the basis clock to the address rush of 1,506MHz, giving us a rise of 1,721MHz. As a G1 Gaming poster, all the GPUs used have been binned through Gigabyte ‘s GPU Gauntlet Sorting program – details of this are n’t shared but hopefully we ‘ll see some upstanding overclocked numbers. unfortunately, no memory overclock has been applied.The custom-made cool is a Windforce 2X design sporting double 90mm fans. The fans spin in different directions to one another, a feature Gigabyte has cleverly named Alternate Spinning Fan Design, and the blades have a unique design said to boost airflow. 3D active Fan is Gigabyte ‘s means of saying the menu is semi-passive, with the fans switching off wholly once the GPU is cool adequate ( typically below 60°C ). The ‘Fan Stop ‘ logo along the circus tent border will light up when this is the case. Both this and the Gigabyte logo are lit by RGB LEDs, which you can control through the Xtreme Engine software.Power is delivered through a 6+1 phase ability system ; very beefy for this level of GPU and a considerable upgrade over the reference 3+1 invention. It ‘s park for companies to use upgrade components in their premium calling card designs, and the GTX 1060 G1 Gaming is no different, receiving the wax complement of Ultra Durable PCB components. This sees the PCB itself a well as the capacitors, chokes and MOSFETs all being upgraded in certain ways compared to normal ones. Gigabyte besides uses what it calls Tier 1 memory, suggesting another type of binning summons is in use.The GP106 GPU is bantam, and it lone needs two direct touch 6mm heat pipes to amply cover it. There are two flipper stacks in the large cool : one which draws heating system away from the GPU and memory chips ( via a contact plate and thermal pads ) and a secondary one that is fed by the aforesaid heat pipes and besides absorbs hotness from the MOSFETs and chokes, again via thermal slog. The cool shroud is fairly closed but not completely, and atmosphere will chiefly be expelled towards your motherboard or back into your case thanks to the vertical placement of the fins.

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