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Heaven Benchmark Pro Rapidshare Library

13.10.2019 

Striking Software - Free Download striking - Top 4 Download - Top4Download.com offers free software downloads for Windows, Mac, iOS and Android computers and mobile devices. Visit for free, full and secured software’s. The Voice from Heaven is a match three game for Windows users. On a cold winter's night in the Frostwood Forest, an old woman found a baby girl which she named Aurora. She eventually discovered that Aurora’s chants had a magical, healing power to make the world around her a better place.

  1. Heaven Benchmark Pro Rapidshare Library Downloads
  2. Benchmark Pro Table
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UPDATE Jeff got back to me and while the bad news is that they aren't reviewing my particular card, the more important good news is that they are getting a sample of the GTX 1060 from an AIB maker so there WILL be a GTX 1060 review, which is the main goal anyway. /UPDATEGiven that TR doesn't need the GTX 1060 for review, here are some random unboxing photos! I need something else for scale since this card really is small. About the only smaller card on the market in a performance bracket is the R9 Nano, which is about an inch shorter.Here are some box & product shots. From what I can tell, Zotac went at least LED light and hopefully LED-free, so it's a GPU and not a lighting array for an airport runway.

Additionally, as you can see, no backplate, just a small HSF that's about as long as the PCB. I thought you had the EVGA card when I made my post earlier.Might want to resize your photos so half of the photo isn't clipped in the post.My 1080P monitor doesn't have enough resolution for the whole photos to show.I originally had the EVGA on back-order but then the Zotac came into stock (same price) and I snapped it up and canceled the other pre-order.I wasn't ordering the pre-overclocked EVGA from that review, just the normal-clocked version that had the same HSF.I will resize the pictures for your pedestrian 1080p display:-p.

Can I has the card it replaced and the card that got replaced by the 1080??pretty please!!Lol. The 'better' one is a GTX-770 2GB model that I didn't move into my secondary machine because. It requires an 8 pin + 6 pin power connector combo and my old PSU 650 watts, BTW would have required too many adapters to make that work. The 'worse' one being replaced in this secondary machine is a 2011 era GTX-560 1.5 GB that uses two of the 6 pin connectors, which was supported by the PSU.Having said that, if you really want them then PM me and we can work something out. I'm not even trying to make money on them although the GTX-770 could fetch about $100 online a month or two ago (probably less now). OK!I finally got a chance to put the card in today. It replaced a GTX 560 that had a whopping 1 GB of RAM and yeah.

It's just a bit of a performance boost.As for thermals and noise, over a prolonged Unigine Heaven benchmark run I was able to get the card peaking at about 73C although it would drop a few degrees as the benchmark changed scenes. Using an SSH session from my phone to monitor the board power intake and temperature via nvidia-smi, I found the card to pull up to 120 Watt (usually a little less) under load and the fan got up to about 65% under full load at 73C.On to noise: I am not in anything near an anechoic test chamber but at the highest fan load that I observed I could hear a minor whirring when I put my head about a foot from the case. It's a nice neutral 'whoosh' whir noise that's not overly loud and is definitely not in an annoying frequency range.

I had all sound turned down, and if the standard Unigine music or other noise from music or a game was playing the fan would be effectively inaudible.At 'idle' I can't hear the fan over ambient noise although here is one complaint: Using the default BIOS the fan never seems to drop below 40%! The card at idle is actually getting down to 28-29C which of course is extremely cool for this type of product but the fan never drops below 40%. The fan noise is basically inaudible so I'm not complaining too much, but my GTX 1080 from EVGA has a much better setup where the fans only begin to turn on at 60C and since the card idles at about 47C doing non-3D intensive work, the fans spend a large chunk of their time completely turned off.As for the clocks, from what I could tell the card actually exceeded its stated turbo boost frequency most of the time with clockspeeds hovering around 1800 MHz when the boost is only supposed to be 1708MHz. This is not a pre-OC'd card.Anyway, I may post some CUDA benchmarks once I do some new runs with the new card later, but here are a couple of photos.First: Old card (lower card in my hand) next to the new card that's plugged into the case to give you an idea of how small the new card is.And the Unigine Heaven benchmarks, old to new. UPDATE 7/22/2016: EVGA sent over a new ‘FanStop’ vBIOS for the GeForce GTX 1060 SC that allows for semi-passive fan curve and also unlocked full manual control over the fan speed.Noise is way down at idle/load, but temps are of course up. We originally got 22C at idle and 60C at load on an open air test system and that was amazing.

Now we are getting 37C at idle and 74C at load, but the card is silent at idle and much quieter at load. Noise was 39.8dB idle and 43.4dB load and now they are at 37.9dB idle and 38.4dB at load.

Going down 5dB is huge as the decibel scale is logarithmic! We also noticed that the idle power from 96W down to just 94-95W with the fan off, so lower noise, less power and still respectable temperatures. If you wanted to run cooler you could always adjust the fan profile with a utility like EVGA Precision X OC.chukula are you able to adjust the Zotac's fan profile with Afterburner or something similar? Chukula are you able to adjust the Zotac's fan profile with Afterburner or something similar?Unfortunately no because I'm running Linux and those utilities only run under Windows.It is possible with at least some cards to adjust the fan profile manually using the 'nvidia-settings' utility with the 'CoolBits' option turned on, but I usually don't bother with that level of hacking.The good news is that at 40% the fan is basically silent and as a bonus the GPU is kept extra cool during regular non-3D intensive workloads so it's not a deal breaker by any means. I think I was so impressed by my EVGA GTX-1080 not even needing the fan until ramping up a real 3D workload that I just got spoiled.

Heaven benchmark pro rapidshare library downloads

Heaven Benchmark Pro Rapidshare Library Downloads

I've joined the club. I wasn't going to get a GTX 1060 before September, but a few weeks ago my 660 Ti unceremoniously kicked the bucket and would no longer boot properly. After nearly 2 weeks of looking for a GTX 1060 variant that was in stock and was not overpriced (including looking at Amazon's UK and German sites as well as multiple local stores), I finally found one for an acceptable price and got it as soon as I could., in case you're wondering.The default boost clock was 1784 MHz, but I've discovered that during actual use the card would boost as high as 1924 MHz without any input on my part.

After settling on an acceptable fan profile in MSI Afterburner, I've decided to increase the maximum boost to an even 2050 MHz and so far have no problems. Quite the opposite: not only is it over twice as fast as my previous card, it also seems to have properly installed cooling this time around because my previous card had liked to lock up before reaching 75 degrees. I suspect due to shoddy VRM cooling, which might as well be the final cause of death, but we'll never know.The card is not silent, but it's pretty quiet for my taste, definitely not louder than my previous Geforces.

Not only is it the strongest GPU that's ever been in my rather average PC, but it also uses the least power of any of the GPUs I've used in the past 8 years. Those two facts together make for a very exciting combo.I can finally use Ultra detail in Witcher 3. The card isn't strong enough to enable AA at 1080p with the levels of detail I prefer, but that's just as well, because I never liked or cared for AA anyway. Other than that, I think it's a pretty capable card for 1920x1080.

Benchmark Pro Table

I'm not sure I'd recommend it for 2560x1440 though and it's a definite 'no' for 4K, despite the fact it's a hair faster than a vanilla GTX 980. I hope it'll serve me for at least 3 years like the previous Geforce.Edit: I mistook this thread for the title and for not seeing other similar threads, so feel free to move my post if there's a more appropriate thread.

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