The waterblock is supplemented with a metal plate, thanks to which the video card on which the waterblock is installed is closed on all sides. It is offered in two versions – black and silver, which are fully called EK-Quantum Vector FE RTX 3070 Ti D-RGB – Black Special Edition and EK-Quantum Vector FE RTX 3070 Ti D-RGB – Silver Special Edition, respectively. Liquid cooling company EK has unveiled a water block for the Nvidia GeForce RTX 3070 Ti Founders Edition. The company does not name the price of the novelty. In the description, the manufacturer mentions functions aimed at fans of computer games, as well as tools that have already become standard designed to reduce eye fatigue. The delivery structure allows you to change the height of the screen by 130 mm and the angle of inclination within the range from -5 ° to 20 °. In addition, the equipment includes four USB 3.0 ports (USB-C, USB-B and two USB-A), two 3W speakers and a headphone jack. There are two HDMI 2.0 ports and one DisplayPort 1.4 for the input signal. It works in 8-bit color space, covering 94% of the DCI-P3 color space and 120% of the sRGB color space. The monitor supports Adaptive-Sync technology and a refresh rate of 165 Hz, and in OC mode – and 170 Hz. Pixel response times are claimed to be 1ms (GtG) and 0.8ms (MPRT). The maximum screen brightness is 350 cd / m2, the contrast ratio is 1000: 1, and the viewing angles are 178 °. The monitor is based on a 31.5-inch SuperSpeed IPS panel with a QHD resolution (2560 x 1440 pixels). KVM allows one set of peripherals to be used with two systems, switching between them at the push of a button on the monitor. USD$999, about the same cost as another Rog Swift (plus keyboard), lol.The M32Q monitor, which the manufacturer describes as the first gaming monitor with a built-in KVM switch, has been added to the Gigabyte range. This Gefen GTB-DPKVM-3CAT7(-BLK) DisplayPort KVM Extender over CAT-7 advertises up to (when all the proper DisplayPort 1.1a, USB 2.0, and CAT-7 cables/devices are used). Why invest extra into a monitor built for beautiful gaming, then chop it down to 60fps? So I reorganized things, keeping the Swift on my pretty gaming rig, buying a cheapo little monitor (and another keyboard) to use on my (well, my employer's) KVM machines. Your comment made me realize the same thing. I may have to look at a different monitor that has two inputs I suppose. I was curious if a 60Hz rated one would work at all. Thank you for the quick reply about your setup. I suppose it helps with dips in fps to eliminate tearing and reduce the stuttering caused by v-sync? Either way this isn't going to work for me if it doesn't support higher than 60Hz. I don't really understand the concept of getting a 144Hz display if you then limit it to 60fps.
And switching is not quite instantaneous, it takes a tiny fraction of a second to cross over. Not a biggy, but it's annoying that I cannot use USB3.0 superspeeds on my keyboard's integrated USB3.0 hub.
My only complaints with the unit - aside from hard technical limits and price tag - are that (contrary to some published info) it enumerates as USB2.0, not USB3.0. I think a single GPU would lose some fps, but I don't notice significant loss with my 2-SLI GTX980 setup (which almost always assures >60fps at these single-monitor resolutions, anyhow). It does work with G-Sync, up to 60Hz (or up to 60 fps, if you like), but it introduces latencies which apparently load onto the GPU (or force it to slow frame timing) a little. But, if manfully forced through ugly hacks, it typically just halts drawing and kicks an onscreen error message back through the OS.) It turns out that DisplayPort 1.1a and DisplayPort 1.2 are, in the context of this application, fully compatible and interchangeable. It also works fine with a sordid variety of USB network and video capture hardwares. If you can find anything better then please inform me by PM, haha. I use the Belkin F1DN104P - it supports one input and four outputs (DisplayPort 1.1a, I think it's basically the best KVM specs you can find. Join Date Mar 2015 Reputation 152 Posts 2,718
Samsung 850 PRO 512GB SSDs, 4xSATA3 RAID0 NVIDIA Quadro GP100GL/16GB, 16xPCIe3, NVLink1 (SLI-HB)