NVIDIA

GeForce GTX TITAN Z

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Hardware Profile
Value Score
0.011
Perf Index
5%
VRAM
12 GB
MSRP
€2,189.00 (est.)
TDP
375 W
Retail Prices

Overview

The GeForce GTX TITAN Z is a dual-GPU Kepler card released in May 2014, combining two GK110 dies on a single board to deliver the highest compute throughput of any single-card solution in NVIDIA's consumer lineup at the time. It succeeded the TITAN Black as NVIDIA's most extreme consumer offering.

The TITAN Z carries 12GB of GDDR5 memory β€” 6GB per GPU die β€” on a 768-bit effective bus, and carries a substantial TDP of 375W, requiring two 8-pin power connectors. Its dual-GPU design means performance depends heavily on game and application support for multi-GPU rendering, which varied considerably and was declining as a development priority by the time of its release. It has no hardware ray-tracing support, no Tensor cores, and no DLSS.

At $2,999, the TITAN Z was priced for professional visualization, GPU compute research, and extreme enthusiast use rather than typical gaming. Its practical gaming performance was often below expectations given the price, as dual-GPU scaling was inconsistent across titles. It is a collector's curiosity today, representing a specific moment in NVIDIA's prosumer product history.

Technical Specifications

Architecture & Cores

Architecture
Kepler
Process Node
TSMC 28nm
CUDA Cores
2,880

Clock Speeds

Base Clock
705 MHz
Boost Clock
876 MHz

Memory

VRAM Capacity
12 GB
Memory Type
GDDR5
Memory Bus
384-bit
Memory Speed
7 Gbps
Bandwidth
336 GB/s

Connectivity & Power

Interface
PCIe 3.0 x16
TDP
375 W
Power Connectors
2x 8-pin
Released
May 28, 2014

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