Click on
'Customize and Buy' and select the following configuration:
- Graphics card: NVIDIA® GeForce RTX™ 5070 Ti (16 GB GDDR7 dedicated) + $790
- Processor: Intel® Core™ i7-14700F (up to 5.4 GHz with Intel® Turbo Boost Technology, 33 MB L3 cache, 20 cores, 28 threads) + $160
- Chassis and Power supply: Black metal with 850 W 80 Plus Gold certified ATX power supply + $60
- Click 'Add to Cart'
- Apply the eCoupon at checkout: LEVELUP20
Alternatively, you can also select the following configurations:
- i7-14700F, 850W:
- 16GB DDR5, 512GB SSD + RTX 4080 SUPER - $1543.99
- 32GB DDR5, 1TB SSD + RTX 4080 SUPER - $1655.99
- 16GB DDR5, 512GB SSD + RTX 5070 - $1407.99
- 32GB DDR5, 1TB SSD + RTX 5070 - $1519.99
- 32GB DDR5, 1TB SSD + RTX 5070 Ti - $1759.99
- 16GB DDR5, 512GB SSD + RTX 5080 - $1967.99
- 32GB DDR5, 1TB SSD + RTX 5080 - $$2079.99
SPECS:- Windows 11 Home
- NVIDIA® GeForce RTX™ 5070 Ti (16 GB GDDR7 dedicated)
- Intel® Core™ i7-14700F (up to 5.4 GHz with Intel® Turbo Boost Technology, 33 MB L3 cache, 20 cores, 28 threads)
- Kingston FURY 16GB DDR5-6000 MT/s XMP RGB Heatsink (2 x 8 GB)
- 512 GB PCIe® Gen4 NVMe™ Performance M.2 SSD
- No secondary storage
- Black metal with 850 W 80 Plus Gold certified ATX power supply
- 120 mm 4-heatpipe aRGB air cooler
- No Included Keyboard and Mouse
- Realtek RTL8852BE Wi-Fi 6 (2x2) and Bluetooth® 5.3 wireless card (supporting gigabit data rate)
- HP 1 Year Warranty
https://www.hp.com/us-en/shop/Con...quantity=1
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4 Comments
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Performance wise, the 4080 still comes out ahead. Sometimes, considerably so.
But more importantly, you're also doubling your RAM and storage for 8 bucks.
How HP can justify the anemic specs on the 5070Ti build is a mystery.
Cpu is not that old. It was released in the beginning of 2024. My prebuilt has this same CPU and it never gave me an issue.
They're selling it over a year after the issue was widely published.
There's zero chance they haven't already patched their BIOS to fix the issue even before the processor was installed.
Everyone neglected to realize that all of the problems stemmed from third party manufacturers like ASUS and MSI using the wrong specs in their configuration and OEMs were largely unaffected.
It just follows the old adage of knowing the pioneers by the arrows in their backs.
As far as the Ultra series goes, they're great on power efficiency but worse on raw performance. That platform will go a long way on laptops, but not so much on desktops.
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