• out of stock

Gigabyte RTX2080Ti 11GB Windforce PCIe Video Card $1487.07 + $15 Delivery or Free w/eBay Plus @ Computer Alliance eBay

380
PRESS

Description
Powered by GeForce RTX 2080 Ti, Integrated with 11GB GDDR6 352-bit memory interface, PCIe x16, 3 x DisplayPort (1.4), 1 x HDMI (2.0b), 1 x USB Type-C (support VirtualLink), Quad View, Multi-View. WINDFORCE 3X Cooling System with alternate spinning fans, RGB Fusion 16.7M customizable color lighting, Metal Back Plate. Core Clock 1545 MHz

Warranty: 3 Year Australian Warranty & Support

7% off Selected Sellers
Terms & conditions

Acceptance. By using or attempting to use the redemption code for this offer, you agree to accept and be bound by these terms and conditions.
Offer Period. This offer commences at 10.00 (AEST) on 18 April and ends at 23.59 (AEST) on 25 April 2019 (“Offer Period”).
Conditions. The offer entitles you to 7% off the purchase price (excluding postage costs) on items at Selected Sellers on www.ebay.com.au, except the Excluded Items when you spend $120 or more in one transaction during the Offer Period up to a maximum discount of $1000 per transaction.A maximum of 5 transactions applies. Multiple items may be purchased in 1 transaction (up to a maximum of 10 items per transaction). All monetary amounts specified in these terms and conditions are in Australian dollars (AUD).
“Selected Sellers” means all sellers listed on eBay.com.au where these terms and conditions are found and the coupon redemption code PRESS is displayed in the seller’s item listing.
Exclusions. This offer does not apply to items listed by the Selected Sellers in the following category: Cars, Bikes, Boats (9800), Car & Truck Parts (6030), Coins (11116), Collectables (1), Gift Cards (184609), Other Lots More Items (88433), Real Estate (10542), Services (316), Tickets, Travel (11730);
Redemption. To redeem this offer during the Offer Period, enter the redemption code PRESS into the redemption code box during the checkout process. This code cannot be used in conjunction with any other eBay offer, coupon or voucher. You can only use the redemption code three times during the Offer Period. Notwithstanding the number of eBay User IDs you may have registered with eBay, the code is provided to you in your personal capacity as an eBay User and the limitations on its usage apply to you in that capacity.
eBay rights. Without limiting other remedies and in addition to eBay’s rights under the User Agreement, eBay reserves the right to disallow or reverse a discount or prohibit access to this offer in circumstances where eBay believes:
you have provided false information, conspired with others to gain an unfair advantage or have otherwise been involved in any way in manipulating, interfering or tampering with the conduct of this offer;
a sale or purchase of any item as part of this offer has not been made in good faith, including where eBay considers that the buyer and seller may be related parties (such as family members or parties sharing the same dwelling); or
buyers or sellers have engaged in collusive conduct or any other conduct which eBay considers unfair, fraudulent or untoward.
Active. You must be an eBay.com.au registered member with an active account at the time of redemption (not suspended nor made inactive by eBay).
Shipping. Items will only be shipped to addresses within Australia.
Returns. If you return or seek a refund on any item purchased using this discount, the value of the discount will not be refunded to you.
No withdrawal. This offer cannot be withdrawn into your bank account and cannot be transferred.
Stock. Sellers are responsible for their own stock and eBay does not guarantee the availability of stock. This offer is only available while stock lasts.
Liability. To the extent permitted by law, eBay will not be responsible for any loss incurred by you in redeeming or attempting to redeem the offer or for any costs, damages, accident, delay, injury, loss, expense, or inconvenience that may arise in connection with the use of the offer.
Changes. eBay reserves the right to vary the terms and conditions of the offer at its reasonable discretion by publishing revised terms on ebay.com.au.
Jurisdiction. The parties submit to the non-exclusive jurisdiction of the courts of the state of New South Wales.

Original PRESS deal

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closed Comments

  • Nice price!

  • +2

    Could you plz give more details on this coupon code? I did not find it anywhere else.

  • THAT'S it! I'm selling my GTX 1080 ti's now…. TIME FOR RAY TRACING!! (what ever that is)

    • +1

      its where you trace rey across the galaxy far far away.

      • +2

        ok

        • +1

          my attempts to be funny: fail.

          • @lawyerz: You do realize the GTX 1080 TI is able to do ray tracing?

            It does not do it very well compared to the RTX 2080 TI but if you are running two 1080 TI's in SLI and depending on your monitor it might be enough for you to hold off for now.

    • You can have 0 to 10% performance increase buy getting a 2080 and lose little or no money (or make 26 bucks like I did when I did this possibly).

      You're paying $500 for 25% more performance if you get a 2080 Ti assuming you sell it for $1000.

  • Do I need this card for 1440P Gsync 144Hz monitor?

    Or RTX 2080 or used 1080Ti (these are like $850).

    My system is: i7 9700K, 16GB RAM, Asus ROG motherboard and a Galax GTX 1070Ti.

    • -3

      It's the best there is at the moment, but you will need to wait until the next generation of cards are released to take full advantage of your monitor.

      Short answer is, yes.

      • ok thanks. So the RTX 2080 cannot go over 100fps for 1440P mid-high detail? If it can I would get that to save around $500

        • Depends 100% on the game/workload. Old games could do 1000fps…lol
          Here is a game database comparison for different resolutions.
          One thing to keep in mind: The 2080 TI is actually 40-50% larger than a 2080 (In processing and memory bandwidth), it however runs at a lower clock speed to keep power in check.
          The 2080 TI can be overclocked much more than a 2080 (which is quite high from the factory), when running similar clocks the difference is closer to the 40-50% difference of the hardware. Overclocking like this is so simple these days they made it into a single button.

          Source: 20 years experience overclocking graphics card & my current 2080ti running at over 2ghz….

          https://www.gpucheck.com/compare/nvidia-geforce-rtx-2080-vs-…

        • It's not a straight forward answer. It is entirely dependent on what games you are playing. If your favourite games are a few years old or not graphically intensive then a GTX2080 will be sufficient for 100+ FPS at 1440P.

          If however you are playing latest releases of triple A titles then even a GTX 2080 TI won't consistently be achieving 100+ FPS at Ultra details.

          As always with technology buy what suits your needs. Have a look at benchmarks for your favourite games and make your decision based on your personal gaming preferences.

        • -2

          Why would you spend $1000+ and then turn down graphics quality? If doing that, then a 2060 or 2070 is probably a better investment. Or look at secondhand.

          If you want a card you will be happy with for 5 years at above 60Hz gaming, really the 2080ti is the only choice. 8GB is starting to not be enough memory and the Radeon vii has been shown to offer a smoother experience than the 2080 in some cases where it's frame rates are actually lower. You are probably best to wait until the end of the month for AMD's announcements, which will let us know what is being released and will finally put pressure on nvidia pricing.

          I game at 80Hz, and even 75Hz is a night and day improvement compared to 60Hz.

          • @Major Mess:

            Why would you spend $1000+ and then turn down graphics quality?

            I think it depends on the situation - For example I often do this when my framerate is straddling 60fps and I want it to be more consistent. Unfortunately with a GTX 1080 and 1440p 165Hz monitor I have to do it for most modern titles. Sometimes even the graphical options don't have enough of an impact so I lower the game's internal rendering scale to 80-90% of 1440p.

            That said a 2080Ti would guarantee >60fps all the time anyway so doesn't really apply in this setting. With this card it wouldn't be worth lowering the graphics settings to get a net gain of 10-20fps when you'd probably be up above 75fps anyway :)

        • +1

          Time to summon the jasswolf

        • Battlefield V with my RTX 2080 (not TI) gets me between 120-90 FPS on high settings at 1440p. Had to turn off DX12 and raytracing as DX12 seems to cause some weird hitching issues.

          Overall feels smooth and sexy on my 1440p 144hz freesync monitor.

        • So the RTX 2080 cannot go over 100fps for 1440P mid-high detail?

          Yes easily for many new titles.

          Ultra settings often do very little for image quality with very high performance costs.

    • If you're prepared to google a settings guide for your game, you might find you'll be happy with a 2060 or 2070 for 1440p144hz, especially if you're the kind of person who will look to upgrade should NVIDIA make another big jump with their next-gen GPUs in 10-14 months time.

      I'd say go no higher than the 2080, and learn what the differences are between Ultra and High settings are for your favourite games, because it's often almost no perceptible difference for most of these settings, yet at a high performance cost.

    • No, 2080 or 1080ti will easily give you the FPS. Unless you want ray tracing on. Unless these people are running everything on ULTRA which is often just taking a big performance hit for near noticeable changes. I get 90-100 FPS with my 1080ti on a 3440x1440 monitor with tweaking or the more noticeable things like shadows and AA method.

      • Ok thanks. Can you guys tell the difference with rt on and off?

        • Ray tracing is Nvidia's new way to process lighting effects in real time. Makes for some fantastic visuals in slow paced games but results in a big hit to performance and not many titles support it. I think it is a safe assumption that most people who have a card that supports it has it turned off because you lose a significant amount of FPS. One a side note, have you looked at overclocking your 1070ti? https://www.reddit.com/r/overclocking/wiki/gpu/general

          • @jiberz: I have overclocked a tiny bit. Not much.

    • I have a 1080, with i7 8700k. Everything runs great with my 1440p 144hz gsync monitor, 2080 would do the trick, 2080ti would do the trick with more assurance you can do the same for longer into the future.

  • ok thanks guys:

    Games list below:

    Metro exodus
    CSGO
    LoL
    Flight Sim
    pubg
    overwatch
    Apex legends
    BFV
    rocket league
    R6 Siege

    Thanks.
    K.

    • +1

      i'd probably stick to your 1070 ti if i were you

      • I have a 60Hz monitor now but will be getting a 1440P 144Hz soon. From what I read for the 1070ti at this res I would need to run low settings ?

        • I'm running a gtx 1080 (tiny bit more perf than 1070ti) with a 1440P 165Hz monitor and can say that some games you may need to drop settings for.

          Overwatch - on low nets between 200-300fps. Even on High you'd still be up above 90fps.
          PUBG isn't great - I had to run it on fairly low settings to get above 60fps all the time, but most of the time it'll sit somewhere at about 90fps (I'm pretty fussy and hate when it goes below 60 even some of the time).
          CSGO - Can't remember the last time I tried it but there weren't any issues from what I recall and the frame rate was good (at least above 90fps)
          Rocket league's always been fine for me, well into the 90's.
          Apex was mostly fine, was using medium-high settings and getting between 70 and 120fps.
          Metro exodus is good in some areas and bad in others. Certain spots will drop as low as 55fps but in other spots it can be up around 90-100fps. To get it more consistent i dropped the 'shading rate' (rending scale) in game to 0.9.

          A lot of large "triple-a" games will need a settings drop and/or render scale drop just to stay above 60fps consistently e.g. AC Origins/Oddysey.

          If you want really great consistency and don't want to worry about changing settings then I'd at least be aiming for a 2080 (or even a well-priced second-hand 1080Ti) for 1440p gaming over 60fps. For some people a 1070Ti would keep them happy, and you'd still be able to net a high enough framerate for some games to make the monitor purchase worthwhile.

          • @krazynayba: Thanks for the info! Appreciate it. I will try out the new monitor with my 1070ti and decide. Is a used 1080ti for say $850 a bad buy? May as well get a 2080 for $1100? I see you can get 2080ti for $1400 or so on special ebay :)

            • @k3nnis: It's not bad but it could be better. If you could whittle them down to $800 then I'd say that's a good deal. Otherwise paying $250-$300 more for a 2080 for a minimal increase over the 1080Ti wouldn't really be worth it. Features like ray tracing and DLSS are nice but the raw performance alone is going to get more out of the new monitor.

              The other option is to go all out and grab the 2080Ti. For $300 over the 2080 you'll be getting more real performance along with the "extra goodies" that the RTX series brings. Gaming at 1440p you'd almost never need to worry about tweaking graphical options again - just pick the one of the higher/highest presets and you'll be good to go! (a godsend for people like me who spend as much time with the damn options as they do playing the game :P)

        • Just for info, I have a GTX1070 on a 1440p 144hz Free Sync monitor. There's no game yet that I havent been able to get at least 60fps average on high-ultra settings. For example, I managed to get over 60fps on AC Odyssey with mostly high settings.

          I think you can stick with your 1070ti for another year or so, then look at upgrading. The GPU industry should be much healthier then with the release of AMD's Navi, RTX3000, and Intel's first enthusiast GPU series. This is what I personally plan on doing.

          • @Adoses: 'Getting' 60 fps and 'maintaining' 60fps are very different things. I highly doubt you are maintaining 60fps on Oddysey with those settings and a GTX1070 at 1440p. A 1080Ti can't even do that.

            • @krazynayba: I played the game for a few hours and ran the benchmark included in the game several times. My average was always above 60fps.

              Odyssey is honestly such a weird case. I've seen people claim they can't even get 1080p60fps with a GTX1080. This is probably because they run it on ultra, but there's very minimal difference in quality between high and ultra.

              So I've booted up the game again to run some benchmarks, here's what I got:

              https://www.dropbox.com/s/mjz51qp988pfdb4/Report_2019-04-19_…

              I think with a little more tuning, I can get above 60fps average. It's obviously not a stable 60, but Freesync makes the drops much less noticeable. You should have an easier time since you have a much better CPU and a slightly better GPU.

  • +1

    Thanks guys. Will try it on my 1070ti but I don’t like to play around with settings if avoidable :)

    • Give it a shot, better to try it and see how you feel about it :)

      Also remember that the 'render scale' setting in games is your friend. Sometimes you can keep settings at Ultra but turn this down to 90% to push your frame rate a bit. You lose a very small bit of clarity but sometimes it's worth it for the boost. Just remember, once you hit 75% you're effectively running it at 1080p :P

  • +1

    Showing sold out now but was a top price.

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