PCI-Express Interface
Ad
Best PCI-E Card For Under £50 (inc VAT):
| GeForce 7600 GT | |
|---|---|
| Codename: | RV630 |
| Process: | 65nm |
| Universal Shaders: | 128 |
| Texture Units: | 8 |
| ROPs: | 4 |
| Memory Bus: | 128-bit |
| Core Speed MHz: | 600 |
| Memory Speed MHz: | 500 (1000 effective) |
| DirectX / Shader Model | DX 10 / SM 4.0 |
The 7600 GT is still a quick card, and below £50 there’s nothing that can touch it. The only reason to step up to the £65 level would be to avail of high-definition video acceleration the newer video cards can offer. This is due in part also to the fact that gaming speed won’t increase all that much.
Best PCI-E Card For £80 (inc VAT):
| Radeon X1950 PRO | |
|---|---|
| Codename: | RV570 |
| Process: | 90nm |
| Pixel Shaders: | 36 |
| Vertex Shaders: | 8 |
| Texture Units: | 12 |
| ROPs: | 12 |
| Memory Bus: | 258-bit |
| Core Speed MHz: | 575 |
| Memory Speed MHz: | 690 (1380 effective) |
| DirectX / Shader Model | DX 9.0c / SM 3.0 |
The X1950 PRO is still a very powerful card for the sale price. With no high-performance DirectX 10 cards under £100 to compete against it, the relatively powerful card is having it’s heyday. The card’s other competition is the 7900 GS and 8600 GTS, which are more expensive and offer similar performances.
- Previous page Introduction
- Next page PCI-Express Interface
Google Ads
The Graphics Cards Articles and reviews
- Crysis – The Ultimate Graphics Card Performance Shootout
- AMD Phenom - The Spider Weaves its Web
- AMD Radeon HD 3800: The Empire Strikes Back
- BIOS Flash - Overclock Your Graphics Card in 5 Minutes
- Six Graphics Cards with Luxury Trimmings
- Workstation-Shootout: ATi FireGL V7600 vs. Nvidia Quadro FX 4600
- AMD HD 3800 To Support DX 10.1
- Nvidia's GeForce 8800 GT Reviewed
- DirectX 10 Shootout: Geforce 8x00 vs. Radeon 2x00
- DirectX 10 Cards on a Budget
Forum
- Looking for best gaming system for $2200
- Dell's XPS 720 H2C Hot and Cool
- DELL PowerEdge 2600 for gaming?
- Require aid in choosing a system
- How to make my 8200 multi-headed
- Suitable 22" and 24" lcd monitors for gaming??
- Dell 3008WFP
- The nitty-gritty on LCDs
- Can I run xfire on ubuntu?
- how not to sell linux
Related Content
Best PCI-E Card For Under £50 (inc VAT):
GeForce 7600 GT
Codename:
RV630
Process:
65nm
The Best Gaming Graphics cards for the Money: December 2007 : Read more
Not exactly under £300, unless your talking about the 256MB version which its about £270, your talking about £360-£410.
What would 2x256MB 8800GTs do vs 2x3850 or / 2x3870
are DirectX 10.1 and shader 4.1
The specs seem wrong. RV360? I don't think this card has any universal shaders or DX10/SM4.0 capability.
You have a nice card: 512-bit memory interface, 320 stream processors.
Always take memory capacity with a pinch of salt; 1GB is a lot but it's only useful if the card as a whole can handle ultra-high resolutions; most cards can but a few games will make all but the top-end struggle.
A Geforce 8800GT would have been better IMHO. However as the drivers mature you can expect reasonable gains in performance; stability was the initial criteria. You have a DX10 card there can handle most games with ease, so you might want to try it out for a few months and then sell it..whether you stay or go, chances are you'll be facing the same decision at that time anyway due to the nature of the market, so don't worry
I am considering the HD 3850, as you suggest that it gives the best value in it's range.
The other option is the 3850 with 512 meg on board.
I play flight sim X and games such as silent hunter 4 settlers (rise of an empire is my latest) Unfortunately none of these appear in your benchmarking. So what I want to know is will I get much of an increase in performance from the extra ram on an HD 3850?