Will the new GTX 750 Ti work on my system?

Blade Mastr

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Okay so here's the deal, the new GTX 750 Ti came out a few days ago and the price right now is 149.99 for the EVGA one. I saw the performance and it does a hell of a lot better than my GTX 660 1.5 GDDR5 OEM GPU. What my actual question is do I have to change my PSU? On Nvidia's website it said the minimum reccomended PSU is 300w and my PSU is at 430w. The reason I am asking this question is because I do not know if it will still work or need a replacement PSU.

Link to the product I want to buy:
http://www.evga.com/products/Product.aspx?pn=02G-P4-375...

Here are my PC specs:

CPU: i7-3770
R.A.M: 16Gb 1600 MHz
GPU: GTX 660 GDDR5 1.5 Gb
PSU: 430w
HDD: 2TB
ODD: Dvd Burner RW
O.S: Windows 8.1 64-Bit

Will I have enough headroom when I switch my GPU out for the new GTX 750 Ti?
Man if it doesn't. DAMNIT!

But, yeah there you go. All answers appreciated.
 

Blade Mastr

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Okay can you please keep this tab open for like 10 mins, imma check my PSU.
 

IRyannHD

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Your Wattage is completely fine, obviously a half decent PSU would be better maybe a Corsair series PSU, Seasonic or Antec as it's likely that a generic PSU will fail eventually.
 

IRyannHD

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750TI runs from the PCIE
 

pcgaming98

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Wattage alone isn't what determines what allows him to run a component. One of the most important things to a PSU is Amperage, and Max continuous wattage output during load. That's why I want to know what model his PSU is. It's like getting a 500 watt PSU from an unknown maker that can only deal 25 volts on two 12V rails, that's not enough to run some graphics cards, but the graphics cards will say 500watt power supply minimum.
 

larrym

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If you currently are running a GTX 660, you will be fine with a GTX 750 ti..But I would not say that would be an upgrade performance wise. I doubt you will see any positive difference other than power usage. I just got the 750 ti to play around with and I dont see any difference from my GTX 660.
 

IRyannHD

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He already runs a 660 so he will be fine to run a 770...
 

larrym

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Not all of them run on just the pci, the ASUS 750 ti requires a 6 pin PCIe cable.
 

IRyannHD

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Except he's listed the one he want which runs off the PCIE.
 

larrym

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How can you tell, that link just took me to the evga site..some evga 750 ti's do some dont.
 

IRyannHD

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Well that fact it takes you to Evga tells me that it runs from the PCIE as the Evga 750TI runs from the PCIE although I'm not sure about their double fan models.
 

tabascosauz

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Is this an XPS 8500? Last time I checked Dell was the only OEM that offered such a combo (3770 non-K, GTX 660 OEM).

No one has brought up the most important issue; Dell's motherboard (or maybe HP or whatever OEM you have) may not be compatible with the 750 Ti. Don't ridicule me like others before have done, http://en.community.dell.com/support-forums/desktop/f/3515/t/19474677.aspx clearly documents the trials and tribulations that 8500 owners like myself have experienced. However, I have already replaced the Dell motherboard with a retail one and reinstalled Windows, so it's not a problem for me.

As for power, you should be fine given the BIOs and motherboard aren't giving you issues. OEM psus are complete garbage; the XPS 8500 has one of the better OEM psus on the market and it can still only deliver 385W out of a claimed 460w on 12V, which is spread out across 3 different 12V rails. However, with the exception of the Asus 750 Ti, all other 750 Tis draw their power solely from the PCI slot and don't require any power connectors; if Dell felt that the GTX 660/HD 7870 can run on a 460w PSU, you bet that a 750 Ti will without any difficulty.

EDIT: if you are really paranoid, you can just swap out the OEM psu for a new one (I would say a TX-M/HX from Corsair or a G series/S12G/S12II from Seasonic would be your best bet for a reliable PSU).
 

IRyannHD

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I think he will be fine, power wise he is fine, he don't need a 6 pin power connecter and it will work most likely as he runs a 660.
 

Blade Mastr

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Okay guys I got my PSU specs.
Here they are:

DC OUTPUT: MAX OUTPUT POWER 460W

+12VA -- 18A, +12VB --- 16A,
+12VC --- 8A, +3.3V --- 17A,
+5V --- 25A, -12V --- 0.3A,
+5V AUX ---3.0 A
+5V AND +3.3V Shall not exceed 142 W
+12VA, +12VB and +12VC Shall not exceed 385w

There, now what is your guys' opinions?
 

IRyannHD

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We've established that you're fine, you run a 660 so power wise you're fine, you don't need a 6 pin power connector and because you run a 660 your motherboard can support the 750ti.
 

larrym

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Performance

NVIDIA GTX 750 Ti
640 CUDA Cores
1059 MHz Base Clock
1137 MHz Boost Clock
Memory

2048 MB, 128 bit GDDR5
5400 MHz (effective)
86.4 GB/s Memory Bandwidth
Interface

PCI-E 3.0 16x
DVI-I, HDMI, DisplayPort
Resolution & Refresh

240Hz Max Refresh Rate
Max Analog : 2048x1536
Max Digital : 4096x2160
Operating System Support

Windows 8 32/64bit
Windows 7 32/64bit
Windows Vista 32/64bit
Windows XP 32/64bit
Requirements

Minimum of a 400 Watt power supply.
(Minimum recommended power supply with +12 Volt current rating of 20 Amps.)
An available 6-pin PCI-E power connector
Total Power Draw : 85 Watts

FROM EVGA's SITE
 

IRyannHD

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Like I said he's fine.
 

Blade Mastr

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Oh man if you guys are right. YES! Just to tell you guys, if I actually buy the 750 Ti, that will be my first graphics card buy. I'm getting so excited!
 

IRyannHD

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Hope I helped :)