![]() EVGA’s boost clock on this card is 1860MHz with memory at 8Gbps stock on the 128-bit bus, enabling operation at 128GB/s. The card runs 896 CUDA cores, or 7 streaming multiprocessors at 128 CUDA cores per SM, which leaves us wondering when the 1650 Ti will release as this is not a fully populated GPU die. This model also includes a metal backplate, one of the primary marketing features of the two-slot, two-fan design. The GTX 1650 SC Ultra uses a dual-fan cooler design that we’ll discuss more in our tear-down video and in the thermals section of this video. The EVGA GTX 1650 SC Ultra runs a 90W board power stock, whereas the reference design is suited for 75W. We’re working with the GTX 1650 SC Ultra Gaming, a 4GB GDDR5 solution that costs $170, about $20 over the price floor for the lowest-end cards, and includes a 6-pin connector for more clock-boosting and overclocking headroom.
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