NVIDIA
GeForce GTX TITAN Z
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Hardware Profile
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