The department responsible is currently working hard to make as many of these new GPUs as possible available to our customers, but we're sorry to say that timescales and quantities are uncertain.
With high-end graphics cards, very high currents flow through the coils of the voltage converters. This results in microscopically small vibrations, which can become noticeable as an audible noise. This coil whine is not a defect, but a normal physical behaviour of the components under high load. Board partners try to reduce this with a few design tricks, but this phenomenon cannot be completely avoided as it is a fundamental effect of the high electromagnetic load and can occur to varying degrees depending on the card and system.
Unfortunately, we do not have any personal user experience with this product, but I am happy to forward your question to the Community, perhaps a Community member can help you.
Otherwise, I would recommend that you start a Community discussion about this so that more people become aware of it.
You can start a discussion in the "Graphics card" section at the following link: https://www.digitec.ch/de/s1/forum/producttype/grafikkarte-106
I actually have the same problem with the 5070 ti and 5080, both asus tuf, it's too much for the price to hear the capacitors at this point, fortunately it only happens in games and not in office use, but it's not a defect so there's no return guarantee, at least my 2 cards have the right rops and don't burn out.
As this product is not yet available (early May 2025 according to EKWB), we are unable to supply it, as none of our suppliers offer it. However, as soon as it is added by one of our suppliers, we will add it to our catalog.
I've had this exact card for 2 days and it also has coil whine, but only under load. No dealer will take the card back because of this. It is technically almost impossible to avoid the coil beeping. I would rather check whether it has the 112 ROPs. You can see this in the GPU-Z software. If it only has 104 ROPs, then that would be a reason to return it. According to NVIDIA, approx. 0.5% of all graphics cards have this problem.