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Asus Is Launching an Overclocked GeForce RTX 3090 Turbo Graphics Card

It uses a blower-type cooler and overclocks the GPU to 1,725MHz.

 & Matthew Humphries Former Senior Editor

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It's proving extremely difficult to find stock of any RTX 30-series graphics cards, and that's unlikely to change now we have a cheaper RTX 3060 Ti on the market. However, Asus is pushing ahead at the other end of the market by launching a GeForce RTX 3090 with a different cooling solution and the smallest of overclocks.

Nvidia's RTX 3080 and 3090 cards use a hybrid vapor chamber cooler, which is far from cheap. However, as Videocardz reports (via GDM), Asus' new GeForce RTX 3090 Turbo replaces it with a custom blower-type cooler. This is expected to provide two advantages and one disadvantage. The blower cooler is cheaper and it pushes more of the hot air produced by the card outside of your system case, but it's a noisier solution.

Everything else about this Turbo card is the same as the standard RTX 3090, including 24GB of GDDR6X memory and 10,496 CUDA cores. However, Asus is using its GPU Tweak software to automatically overclock the chip from 1,700MHz to 1,725MHz. It a 1.8 percent overclock on the already extremely high performance Founder's Edition card, but every little helps. It's also worth noting that Asus isn't alone in switching to a blower cooler and adding Turbo to the name. Gigabyte has done the same thing, but the core clock is lower at 1,695MHz.

It's worth remembering that the RTX 3090 is the only model to support the NVLink connector, and the blower-type cooler could certainly help keep system temperatures manageable when running two of these cards together. That's assuming you can even source two, let alone afford to buy them. Pricing hasn't been revealed yet, but Asus' new card is unlikely to cost less than the MSRP of $1,499.

About Our Expert

Matthew Humphries

Matthew Humphries

Former Senior Editor

My Experience

I started working at PCMag in November 2016, covering all areas of technology and video game news. Before that I spent nearly 15 years working at Geek.com as a writer and editor. I also spent the first six years after leaving university as a professional game designer working with Disney, Games Workshop, 20th Century Fox, and Vivendi.

I hold two degrees: a Bachelor's degree in Computer Science and a Master's degree in Games Development. My first book, Make Your Own Pixel Art, is available from all good book shops.

My Areas of Expertise

  • PC components and system building
  • Raspberry Pi
  • Software development
  • Storage technology
  • Video games and gaming hardware

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