Microsoft Flight Simulator X SP2

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The Geforce 6800 GT and 7950 GT only run with DirectX 9 effects. In this mode, the environment is not reflected in the water, but the waves are simulated cleanly by the pixel shader. In DirectX 10 mode, the landscape is reflected in the surface of the water. With the Forceware Version 174.74 graphics driver, the pixel shader still does not produce waves.

gpu vs cpu

The flight simulator reacts very heavily to the clocking rate of the CPU, the Q6600 with 2.4 GHz being slower than the E6750 at 2.67 GHz. Only when the Q6600 is overclocked to 3200 MHz does it take the top spot with the new G92 graphics chip. The Geforce 6800 GT barely reacts at all, and the Geforce 7950 GT reacts slightly to the better processor speed. The Geforce 9600 GT and its 1024 MB graphics memory achieve the best results, but only in conjunction with the E6750, Q6600 or X6800EE and at the 1920x1200 pixel resolution with antialiasing. If a weaker version of the E2160 is installed, the Geforce 9800 GTX with 512 MB graphics memory wins the race.

gpu vs cpu

gpu vs cpu

gpu vs cpu

gpu vs cpu

gpu vs cpu

gpu vs cpu


Talkback
david__t 16/05/2008 12:30
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david__t

Shock horror - video cards have a greater impact than CPUs overall on games! Matching your CPU to your GPU has been something that gamers have done for years to make sure that their graphics card was not hampered - since when has this ever been an "endless topic of conversation"? Its like asking whether a better clutch or bigger engine makes a car go faster or not - yes you need a decent clutch to put the power down, but that power comes from the engine. Come on THG - this is not up to your usual standard of asking interesting questions - if you want an endless topic of conversation, try the age old sync / async RAM operation issue.

ToTaL SHiT 16/05/2008 07:18
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ToTaL SHiT

The overclock potential of a cpu is far greater then a gpu.
The entry level cpu in a series have almost as much overclock potetial as a high end one, sometimes even more due to fsb clock.
The most bang for the buck is to had with a entry level cpu in a current series opverclocked, combined with the best grahics card in your budget (save money on cpu and put it towards gpu)

mackayde 18/05/2008 01:02
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mackayde

This review is fantastic. It is best for people who want to see difference between their current configuration and performance gains between old and new hardware per buck.
E.G. If someone has a 8600GT and a low spec CPU, it makes no sense to buy a new graphics card as this review coroborates the relation between GPU AND CPU.
Great stuff Tom's.

david__t 18/05/2008 09:54
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david__t

Why do you mention overclocking? Anyway, entry level CPUs have less cache and a slower bus speed - none of which can be gained back by overclocking - and then you have to spend loads on a good heatsink (for any clock speed increase worth talking about) which means you may as well have bought a better CPU in the first place.
Also, Mackayde, the fact that you said 'coroborates' makes my point for me - this is ground already covered - we all know that mid range goes with mid range etc... for the best bang for the buck & price/performance ratio.

Anonymous 21/05/2008 11:53
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These test are being made for people who have doubts about cpu/gpu performances, not all people are genius like you david t to know the differences among these 2 chips. Dont take yourself to be too intelligent by trying to contradict thg because I sincerely think you are not that intelligent, you a_sh_le

samuraiblade 16/07/2008 06:02
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samuraiblade

good for me to know as i have just upgraded to a dfi x48 board and e8400 , i currently have a 8800gt on it but as its a crossfire board im intending to get the 1gb 4870 when its released at the end of the month , my sons machine is an athlon 64 3ghz with pci-x , so it kills two birds with one stone as he can have my 8800gt and get a very good machine also in the process.

AleksandarTokarev 24/07/2008 08:41
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AleksandarTokarev

Great Review :)

Anonymous 12/08/2008 06:11
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"Anyway, entry level CPUs have less cache and a slower bus speed - none of which can be gained back by overclocking"

Err, of course you can make the bus speed faster by overclocking. What THG is suggesting is that the hit you get from using a cheaper CPU (i.e. less cache, lower bus speeds) can generally be dialled out by overclocking the CPU to death. i.e. run 3DMark on both, I bet you can easily get the same of better results from a lower prices CPU and many of the premium units.

Revonize 22/08/2008 12:16
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Revonize

Great article. At this moment i got very low spec CPU - P4 HT 3.0, ASUS P5KC mainboard, 4GB of Ram and HD 4850 graphics card. I am not very satisfied with overall performance of my machine. I want to upgrade a CPU but I was not sure what kind of performance boost i got. Now I know :) THX THG

g0ldf1sh 28/08/2008 07:11
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g0ldf1sh

Very useful article for me - in the process of component hunting for a new PC (upgrading from a P4 2.8, 6800GT (AGP) and 1gb of RAM - yep old stuff indeed) For me the fact the CPU needs to be around 3Ghz to get the best out of the Graphics card is the most useful bit of advice i could get right now, thanks THG

Anonymous 29/09/2008 12:52
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Its sad when "know it all" computer nerds stroke their e-peen by slagging off a feature that is almost definatly going to be useful to countless others.

Its people with david_t's attitude that give other techie types who may already know all this a bad name.

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