The NVIDIA GeForce GT 440 is a graphics card released on February 1st, 2011. It is based on the Fermi architecture, manufactured by TSMC with a process size of 40 nm. With a die size of 116 mm² and 585 million transistors, it has a density of 5.0M/mm². The chip package is BGA-973.
Featuring a GPU name of GF108-400-A1, the NVIDIA GeForce GT 440 has a graphics processor with a clock speed of 810 MHz, a shader clock of 1620 MHz, and a memory clock of 900 MHz. It has a maximum memory size of 1024 MB, with DDR3 memory type and a 128-bit memory bus. With a bandwidth of 28.80 GB/s, it has 96 shading units, 16 TMUs, 4 ROPs, and a total of 2 SM counts.
In terms of performance, the NVIDIA GeForce GT 440 has a pixel rate of 3.240 GPixel/s and a texture rate of 12.96 GTexel/s. It has a theoretical float performance (FP32) of 311.0 GFLOPS and a double performance (FP64) of 25.92 GFLOPS.
The card measures at a single-slot width and is 145 mm in length. It has a thermal design power (TDP) of 65 W and is recommended to be used with a minimum of 250 W power supply unit (PSU). The only output available is 1x DVI and it does not require any power connectors. The board number for this design is P1071 SKU 0001.
Supported by DirectX 12, OpenGL 4.6, OpenCL 1.1, and Shader Model 5.1, the NVIDIA GeForce GT 440 does not support Vulkan and has a CUDA version of 2.1.
There are 5 reviews of this graphics card in our database. This card is no longer in production and has been replaced by newer models.
Overall, the NVIDIA GeForce GT 440 is a reliable and efficient graphics card with decent performance for its release date and price of 79 USD. It is suitable for entry-level gaming and can handle basic tasks such as video playback and photo editing. Despite being an older model, it still supports modern graphics APIs and has 4 retail board designs based on its architecture. However, it does have limitations such as not supporting higher-end games or advanced rendering techniques.