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1070ti is stronger
1660it is slightly newer, but still no rt cores
(they both can do rt, but at greatly reduced performance compared to rtx gpus)
the mobos 2nd x16 slot only has 4 lanes
and its 3rd x16 slot only has 1 lane
and i would not trust the thermaltake smart psu as far as i can throw it
From what i see yes ! But i always read that you need some more to have leverage and security, doest this number include it you think ?
Thanks a lot for the answer !
I'm rendering with GPU from time to time, and i know 3dsmax allow you tu use 2 gpu, even not on SLI. SLI will mostly add the VRAM force of both but i don't particularly need that, instead i can make both gpu work on the same image or animation, as two entities from what i've seen.
But i'm not sure i understand the part about the lanes on the x16 slot. I'm not familiar with this.
So basicly you saying the main lane (of my gtx 1660ti) is the one with the more lane (power?)
Thanks for all the advices !
The 1070 ti doesn't support mesh shaders, so, games like starfield and Alan wake 2 will not have the same optimizations that the 1660 ti possesses.
There's no point in using both.
LOL what? Neither one of those GPUs could run either of those games good enough. It's going to be a slideshow
too much doesnt hurt, and it would also keep it in a more efficient power range
evga, bequiet, corsair, seasonic with 80+ gold or better
https://pcpartpicker.com/products/power-supply/#e=6,5,4&m=337,11,14,71&sort=price&page=1&A=1000000000000,2050000000000
Even a 650W Gold or Platinum PSU would be enough for your CPU and BOTH GPUs. As you generally can't use both GPUs at the same time anyways. And if one is just doing video encoding or something like that, it's load would be very low.
Go with something decent from Corsair, Seasonic or BeQuiet.
When it comes to Thermaltake, they make decent Cases and Fans, that's about it; all their PSUs are pure junk.
However, yes 850W (of a decent PSU, not that junk you have now) or better is the way to go, simply because if you change GPUs you'll need the extra power. Not to mention you want a PSU that has 2x 8pin EPS + 4x 8pin PCIE
Anyway, M.S.I's. spec for your 1070 ti is 180 watts[www.msi.com], and 130 watts for your 1660 ti[www.msi.com]. The combined T.D.P. is 310 watts.
That puts you in the same anticipated power consumption ballpark as a single RTX 4080[www.techpowerup.com], which is a 320 watt card. The RTX 4080 was released after LGA 1700, so the power guidance for it should be up do date with modern processors, and it should be roughly interchangeable since it's the same wattage.
Rather than arguing over the exact math of the matter, we can consult the
Asus Power Supply table[dlcdnets.asus.com], which shows their recommendations based off of both the G.P.U. class and C.P.U. class of the system. Since it's all wattage based, the recommended P.S.U. sizing should be brand agnostic.
A 4080 with an i9 should work fine with a 850 watt supply according to Asus, Now the thermaltake smart series isn't particularly well regarded. Its possibly served you well, but it also sounds like you haven't pushed it to its limits yet and doing so may be a bit risky, esp. with an i9 in the socket, you are really buying because most of them are rebranded from O.E.M. models, so that might actually be better than their lower end models. I'm not sure.
I don't know if your power supply has enough auxiliary P.C.I.E. hookups for both cards, and I don't care to check. That's on you to figure out.
Anyway, since you're thinking of buying a new P.S.U. anyway though, I might take this opportunity to upgrade to a Super Flower Leadex III 850 watt gold rated supply[www.newegg.com] though. Superflower is well regarded, and they're one of the brands that does the O.E.M. work for others, so when you buy a Super Flower, you know you're getting actually getting a Super Flower branded supply, rather than a disguised Chinese firecracker. You get a nifty 12 centimeter Megacool case fan as a bonus gift from Newegg too.
It's also 80+ gold rated so you'll save money on electrical consumption in the long run. Later down the line, if you decide you want to use a 12vhpwr P.S.U., you can also buy this cable for it.[www.newegg.com], if for any reason you don't like Nvidia's adapters.
It also wouldn't be as aged, and you'd be getting a new warranty..