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HIS Radeon HD 2600 XT Zalman

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HIS Radeon_HD_2600_XT Zalman

The Zalman cooler is a good alternative to HIS’ own IceQ version. It is flat and very quiet at only 38.3 db(A). When idling in 2D mode, the cooler keeps the GPU at only 42°C, which increases to 69°C in 3D mode. This Radeon GD 2600 XT is equipped with 512 MB of DDR3 RAM.

While the box does not contain a DVI-HDMI adapter, the card does ship with a component output cable (HDTV). The gaming bundle only comprises Half Life 2: Lost Coast and Deathmatch, the Black Box is not included. Additionally, a flexible Crossfire bridge comes with the card for dual-card configurations.

In the cumulative performance ranking, the Radeon HD 2600 XT with the Zalman cooler comes in at 918.6 fps, while the HIS Turbo version with the IceQ cooler reaches 977.8 fps. Its 3D power should be sufficient for many games, although it can’t offer smooth frame rates when maximum quality settings are combined with FSAA at high resolutions.

Beware! Any overclocking experiments are entirely your own responsibility and will generally void your card’s warranty.

The Catalyst driver offers an Overdrive overclocking section which is enabled by default. The automatic clock speed detection routine, which is meant to find the card’s optimal frequencies, does not fault-free. It attempts to increase the GPU frequency from 800 MHz to 880 MHz, which is too much for our sample. We manually adjusted the GPU’s core frequency by 5 percent (840 MHz), which the card was able to handle. Next we increased the memory speed by 10 percent to 770 MHz, up from 700 MHz. Finally, after tweaking the frequencies a little more, we settled on a combination of 850 MHz (GPU) and 770 MHz (memory) for our performance tests. As you can see, the card has overclocking potential and may even reach higher clock speeds with a little more manual fine tuning. However, bear in mind that the Zalman cooler does not provide much cooling for the memory.

HIS Radeon_HD_2600_XT ZalmanHIS Radeon_HD_2600_XT Zalman

HIS Radeon_HD_2600_XT Zalman ConnectorsHIS Radeon_HD_2600_XT Zalman

HIS Radeon_HD_2600_XT Zalman CoolerHIS Radeon_HD_2600_XT Zalman

HIS Radeon_HD_2600_XT Zalman

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Ironnads 08/11/2007 12:42
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First ! e vai!

fluppeteer 08/11/2007 21:33
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"The HIS card only comes with DVI connectors, which makes dual-link a sensible choice for the 1920 resolution."

Uh. No, it really doesn't.

The HDMI(1.2 and below) type A connector is equivalent to
a single-link DVI-D connector; the adaptor is purely
mechanical. Dual-link DVI is equivalent to the HDMI type
B connector, which is largely unused (although I have
hopes, because HDMI 1.3 type B can do 680MPix/s).

1920x1080p/60 fits quite nicely through the bandwidth
limit (165MHz) of an HDMI 1.2 type A connector, and
equally well through a single-link DVI connector -
as you can tell by the multitude of single-link DVI
24" 1920x1200@60Hz monitors on the market.

Dual-link DVI would give you 48bpp colour support at
1920x1080, but that's irrelevant if only a single link
is being used, via an HDMI adaptor. Also, the DVI
connector is perfectly capable of transmitting the
audio component of HDMI (the audio component uses the
same signal wires as the video), if it can be routed
to the card. Whether the content permits the audio to
be routed without HDCP is beyond my expertise.

Also, at the risk of testing my mathematical abilities:

"In Windows XP, the performance delta between the two cards in cumulative frame rate is now less than 20fps (Geforce 8800GTS 1878.9 fps, Radeon HD 2900 XT 1809.6 fps)."

That sounds like "less than 70fps" to me (not that it
makes much difference, obviously - they *are* close.)

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