Galaxy GTX 780 Hall of Fame Edition Stripped Naked & Close Up
If you are looking for something “not off the rack” so to speak, for your PC, nowadays that can be a tough undertaking as most of the really cool stuff comes from Modders and not directly from a manufactures. There are sometimes however, a few rule breakers.
Galaxy is a company that has been making products for quite a few years now and it seems as if they have now set their sites on making a card that is worthy of mention in the form of their new GTX 780 Hall Of Fame (HOF) Edition, an NVIDIA powered monster.
Pictures have now been released showing a completely stripped down version of the new proposed card and so far it is looking solid. The pictures that were released from the folks in China are said to be a 95% complete version of the new card.
I wonder if we can get them to make a Hall of The Mountain King Edition, that would the shit, right? Oh well, Middle Earth may not make the cut, but the pictures of the HOF GTX 780 were posted on Chinese website ChinaDIY.com.cn, allowing the masses to take a view at their new silicon dream. Galaxy had this on display apparently at Computex 2013 and those folks got to take an up close and personal look at what Galaxy has up their sleeves.
GTX 780 HOF Edition Gallery
From what has been shown thus far, we can see that this is no run of the mill piece of silicon. The HOF will feature a 10-phase power design and 12 Tantalum capacitors all in a tightly packed column towards the back of the card. For keeping the card running with reduced power consumption, the Hall Of Fame Edition also utilizes 12 low-profile ERS solid capacitors that will allow a 33.3 lower power requirement than standard components.
Overclockers and modders alike will really get a kick out of this card. Modders who are looking for a different color in their GPU solution will now have a new choice and overclockers will be able to tweak the crap out of it pushing to its maximum capacity. The HOF comes equipped with two 8-pin auxiliary power connectors ensuring the card has enough power flow to keep up with extreme overclocking ventures.
In case you go to far and burn one of the BIOS chips, you can clearly see a BIOS switch button visible on the I/O panel. If you want to check out the original pictures, check out the source link here, but we are not responsible for what happens afterwards, just saying. This could prove to be a really cool new edition to NVIDIA’s already illustrious partner group that can always use an infusion of new blood. Thanks for reading. Is this something you would be interested in? Join in our interactive pole and tell us your thoughts in the comments below.
Source: Maximum PC


























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