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Which is better 660ti or 750ti?

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Last response: in Graphics & Displays
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March 25, 2014 6:36:50 AM

http://in.ign.com/en/review/1514/nvidia-gtx-750-ti-revi...
According to this review,750 performs pretty close to 660,but 750 is way cheaper than 660(about 4k),so which one to buy?
This Is My Curent Configuration:
CPU:AMD 3.3 GHz AM3 FX6100 Processor
MOBO-Gigabyte GA-78LMT-S2 Motherboard
PSU-Corsair SMPS CX500 500 Watts PSU
GPU-Sapphire AMD/ATI Radeon HD 6670 1GB DDR5 Graphics Card

More about : 660ti 750ti

March 25, 2014 6:46:07 AM

The 660 TI is actually significantly stronger, but the 750 TI will take much less power (and, as you said, is cheaper).

In your position, I would recommend you get the 750 TI since it's certain to run well on your PSU, and I assume you can't afford to replace the PSU. A 660 Ti might be too much for your power supply. In a couple years, if you find yourself needing more power, you can always put another 750 TI in SLI.
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March 25, 2014 10:47:20 AM

What is the power requirement of 660?
I won't overclock my gpu,would require a power supply of more than 500W?
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Best solution

March 25, 2014 11:04:48 AM

Rationale said:
The 660 TI is actually significantly stronger, but the 750 TI will take much less power (and, as you said, is cheaper).

In your position, I would recommend you get the 750 TI since it's certain to run well on your PSU, and I assume you can't afford to replace the PSU. A 660 Ti might be too much for your power supply. In a couple years, if you find yourself needing more power, you can always put another 750 TI in SLI.


Really? The 750Ti is not SLi capable so how is that going to work?

http://www.geforce.com/hardware/desktop-gpus/geforce-gt...
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March 25, 2014 1:47:14 PM

Mousemonkey said:
Rationale said:
The 660 TI is actually significantly stronger, but the 750 TI will take much less power (and, as you said, is cheaper).

In your position, I would recommend you get the 750 TI since it's certain to run well on your PSU, and I assume you can't afford to replace the PSU. A 660 Ti might be too much for your power supply. In a couple years, if you find yourself needing more power, you can always put another 750 TI in SLI.


Really? The 750Ti is not SLi capable so how is that going to work?

http://www.geforce.com/hardware/desktop-gpus/geforce-gt...


Oh. Oh well. His PSU is still borderline, it may run a 660 TI, it may not. If I had to guess, I'd say it probably will work with a 660 TI since Corsair generally makes good PSUs, but idk for sure.

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March 25, 2014 1:51:07 PM

Rationale said:
Mousemonkey said:
Rationale said:
The 660 TI is actually significantly stronger, but the 750 TI will take much less power (and, as you said, is cheaper).

In your position, I would recommend you get the 750 TI since it's certain to run well on your PSU, and I assume you can't afford to replace the PSU. A 660 Ti might be too much for your power supply. In a couple years, if you find yourself needing more power, you can always put another 750 TI in SLI.


Really? The 750Ti is not SLi capable so how is that going to work?

http://www.geforce.com/hardware/desktop-gpus/geforce-gt...


Oh. Oh well. His PSU is still borderline, it may run a 660 TI, it may not. If I had to guess, I'd say it probably will work with a 660 TI since Corsair generally makes good PSUs, but idk for sure.



The OP's PSU is more than enough for a single 660TI, I'm running two 660Ti's in SLi on a 620w PSU.
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March 25, 2014 2:05:43 PM

Mousemonkey said:
Rationale said:
Mousemonkey said:
Rationale said:
The 660 TI is actually significantly stronger, but the 750 TI will take much less power (and, as you said, is cheaper).

In your position, I would recommend you get the 750 TI since it's certain to run well on your PSU, and I assume you can't afford to replace the PSU. A 660 Ti might be too much for your power supply. In a couple years, if you find yourself needing more power, you can always put another 750 TI in SLI.


Really? The 750Ti is not SLi capable so how is that going to work?

http://www.geforce.com/hardware/desktop-gpus/geforce-gt...


Oh. Oh well. His PSU is still borderline, it may run a 660 TI, it may not. If I had to guess, I'd say it probably will work with a 660 TI since Corsair generally makes good PSUs, but idk for sure.



The OP's PSU is more than enough for a single 660TI, I'm running two 660Ti's in SLi on a 620w PSU.


That actually doesn't help the case, since the 120w increase from 500w to 620w can make a huge difference for just one extra video card. A PSU calculator is putting him at 450w under peak load, and you at 550w. You've got more headroom than he does, and possibly a better certified PSU.
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March 25, 2014 2:08:37 PM

Rationale said:
Mousemonkey said:
Rationale said:
Mousemonkey said:
Rationale said:
The 660 TI is actually significantly stronger, but the 750 TI will take much less power (and, as you said, is cheaper).

In your position, I would recommend you get the 750 TI since it's certain to run well on your PSU, and I assume you can't afford to replace the PSU. A 660 Ti might be too much for your power supply. In a couple years, if you find yourself needing more power, you can always put another 750 TI in SLI.


Really? The 750Ti is not SLi capable so how is that going to work?

http://www.geforce.com/hardware/desktop-gpus/geforce-gt...


Oh. Oh well. His PSU is still borderline, it may run a 660 TI, it may not. If I had to guess, I'd say it probably will work with a 660 TI since Corsair generally makes good PSUs, but idk for sure.



The OP's PSU is more than enough for a single 660TI, I'm running two 660Ti's in SLi on a 620w PSU.


That actually doesn't help the case, since the 120w increase from 500w to 620w can make a huge difference for just one extra video card. A PSU calculator is putting him at 450w under peak load.


I don't put any faith into those PSU calculators as the sites they are on are sponsored by the PSU companies that want you to buy a new PSU.
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March 25, 2014 2:12:52 PM

Mousemonkey said:
Rationale said:
Mousemonkey said:
Rationale said:
Mousemonkey said:
Rationale said:
The 660 TI is actually significantly stronger, but the 750 TI will take much less power (and, as you said, is cheaper).

In your position, I would recommend you get the 750 TI since it's certain to run well on your PSU, and I assume you can't afford to replace the PSU. A 660 Ti might be too much for your power supply. In a couple years, if you find yourself needing more power, you can always put another 750 TI in SLI.


Really? The 750Ti is not SLi capable so how is that going to work?

http://www.geforce.com/hardware/desktop-gpus/geforce-gt...


Oh. Oh well. His PSU is still borderline, it may run a 660 TI, it may not. If I had to guess, I'd say it probably will work with a 660 TI since Corsair generally makes good PSUs, but idk for sure.



The OP's PSU is more than enough for a single 660TI, I'm running two 660Ti's in SLi on a 620w PSU.


That actually doesn't help the case, since the 120w increase from 500w to 620w can make a huge difference for just one extra video card. A PSU calculator is putting him at 450w under peak load.


I don't put any faith into those PSU calculators as the sites they are on are sponsored by the PSU companies that want you to buy a new PSU.


Okay... There's no question the GTX 660 TI will perform better. I have a GTX 660 GC, it's about 5% slower than a TI and it handles just about any game on ultra (excepting Metro LL which is on high, and Crysis 3 on high). I just don't want to see him overstress his PSU and end up breaking something or going over budget.

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March 25, 2014 2:15:44 PM

Rationale said:
Mousemonkey said:
Rationale said:
Mousemonkey said:
Rationale said:
Mousemonkey said:
Rationale said:
The 660 TI is actually significantly stronger, but the 750 TI will take much less power (and, as you said, is cheaper).

In your position, I would recommend you get the 750 TI since it's certain to run well on your PSU, and I assume you can't afford to replace the PSU. A 660 Ti might be too much for your power supply. In a couple years, if you find yourself needing more power, you can always put another 750 TI in SLI.


Really? The 750Ti is not SLi capable so how is that going to work?

http://www.geforce.com/hardware/desktop-gpus/geforce-gt...


Oh. Oh well. His PSU is still borderline, it may run a 660 TI, it may not. If I had to guess, I'd say it probably will work with a 660 TI since Corsair generally makes good PSUs, but idk for sure.



The OP's PSU is more than enough for a single 660TI, I'm running two 660Ti's in SLi on a 620w PSU.


That actually doesn't help the case, since the 120w increase from 500w to 620w can make a huge difference for just one extra video card. A PSU calculator is putting him at 450w under peak load.


I don't put any faith into those PSU calculators as the sites they are on are sponsored by the PSU companies that want you to buy a new PSU.


Okay... There's no question the GTX 660 TI will perform better. I have a GTX 660 GC, it's about 5% slower than a TI and it handles just about any game on ultra (excepting Metro LL which is on high, and Crysis 3 on high). I just don't want to see him overstress his PSU and end up breaking something or going over budget.



The 660 non Ti is a 140w GPU and the 660Ti is a 150w GPU, not a PSU breaker.
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March 26, 2014 1:23:19 AM

Ok,so what's the conclusion of this discussion? should I get a 660ti or 750ti?
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March 26, 2014 1:31:00 AM

Piyush_ said:
Ok,so what's the conclusion of this discussion? should I get a 660ti or 750ti?


If you just want outright performance then get the 660Ti.
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March 26, 2014 1:37:15 AM

Piyush_ said:
Ok,so what's the conclusion of this discussion? should I get a 660ti or 750ti?


Mousemonkey is probably right, go for a 660 TI if you can afford it. After looking at reviews on Newegg, plenty of people say your PSU model can handle PCs with similar power requirements.
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March 26, 2014 2:20:52 AM

Thanks man.. appreciate the help... i would certainly go for 660ti.
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