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Review: Three-way GeForce GTX 560 shootout - Gigabyte vs. ASUS vs. MSI

by Tarinder Sandhu on 30 May 2011, 03:21 4.0

Tags: Gigabyte (TPE:2376), ASUSTeK (TPE:2357), MSI

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MSI GTX 560 Twin FrozrII/OC

MSI, too, looks to tap into the potential of the GTX 560 with the overclocking-orientated Twin Frozr II/OC.

The company also firmly believes in recycling, because the cooler is identical to the one featured on the GTX 560 Ti Frozr II, which in turn is based on the GeForce GTX 460 Hawk.

Cooling a mid-range GPU isn't difficult for decent heatsinks. MSI goes overboard with the four nickel-plated heatpipes that attach on to a copper base. The two 6mm and a couple of 8mm heatpipes are in turn connected to aluminium fins running the length of the card.

A couple of 80mm fans push heat away from the fins but, strangely - and, admittedly, like the others - not directly through the rear of the card. Rather, hot air is generally left to circulate around the chassis, meaning you'll need good internal airflow to maximise the benefits of the cooling. Peer down through the heatsink and MSI, too, leaves the 1GB GDDR5 memory uncovered, with the hope that the airflow generated by the fans will keep the memory chips cool.

But there is specific cooling for the power-regulation components on the right-hand side of the Frozr II/OC. An aluminium heatsink, next to the solid ferrite caps, is screwed-in one side and wraps around the PCB on the other. We'd prefer the power plugs to be located on the upper edge of the board, however.

While we've seen some partners go for the jugular and crank up GTX 560 speeds to 950MHz core and 4,500MHz memory, MSI plays the game rather safely - conservatively, in fact. Clocked in at 870MHz core and 4,080MHz memory, MSI encourages you to push the card farther through the use of its rather nifty Afterburner software, which enables the voltage - once it has been unlocked in software - for the GPU to be adjusted from 0.825V through to 1.087V (1.012V default).

You can't go too far wrong with two dual-link DVI and a mini-HDMI port.

There's nothing radically new here with the Frozr II OC, but, really, there doesn't need to be. MSI grabs all the know-how of cooling mid-range GPUs and plonks it on this card. Priced from £160, which is below the current retail price of most GTX 560 Ti cards, MSI has a decent balance of features vs. cost.

Direct comparisons

Bringing the trio of pre-overclocked GTX 560 cards together, here's how they stack up on an at-a-glance table:

Card Price GPU clock
(MHz)
Memory clock
(MHz)
Outputs Cooling Voltage adjustment Power Warranty
Gigabyte GeForce GTX 560 SO 1,024MB £180 900 4,008 2x DL-DVI, mHDMI 2 x 80mm fans Yes 2x 6pin Three years
MSI GeForce GTX 560 TF II/OC 1,024MB £160 870 4,080 2x DL-DVI, mHDMI 2 x 80mm fans Yes 2x 6pin Three years
ASUS GeForce GTX 560 TOP 1,024MB £180 925 4,200 2x DL-DVI, mHDMI 2 x 100mm fans Yes 2x 6pin Three years