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Upper Mainstream: AMD/ATI Radeon HD3850

Upper Mainstream: AMD/ATI Radeon HD3850

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pci express 2.0

We used a Radeon HD 3850 graphics card, which is part of Tom’s Reference System. The RV670 graphics core runs at 670 MHz clock speed and has 512 MB DDR3 of video memory that operates at 1660 MHz. It can be considered a solid mainstream card, providing good 3D performance and DirectX 10.1 and Shader Model 4.1 support with low energy requirements, thanks to the 55 nm process used. However, it cannot compete with the GeForce 8800 cards or higher models.

pci express 2.0

High-End: Nvidia GeForce 9800GX2

pci express 2.0

The new GeForce 9800 GX2 is Nvidia’s double GPU Whopper, utilizing two G92 GeForce chips (8800GT) to increase performance. As a consequence, it’s still based on a 65 nm process, which also powers the GeForce 8 family — DirectX 10 is supported, but Shader Model 4.1 is not. However, this is the fastest 3D graphics solution available today, and it will become faster still when deployed into the new nForce 790i SLI platform, where two of these can be combined in SLI mode. Note, though, that while the ATI card mentioned above stays well below 100 W maximum power requirement, this graphics behemoth operates in the 200 W range when processing 3D data.

pci express 2.0

pci express 2.0

pci express 2.0


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Talkback
mi1ez 24/04/2008 11:28
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mi1ez

The x1 mark is wrong in the diagram- it's the gap right after the key, not ON the key!

Anonymous 28/04/2008 12:15
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My nVidia GeForce 8800 GTS 512 is marketed as being PCIe 2.0. Why is this not listed?

spanner_razor 04/05/2008 09:53
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spanner_razor

Typo on the last page referring to 9800GX2 as 9900.

jeanpieterse 07/08/2008 05:23
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jeanpieterse

My nVidia GeForce 8800GS 384MB is marketed as being PCIe 2.0. Why is this not listed?

jodrummersh 17/10/2008 06:51
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jodrummersh

This article is terribly misleading and does not test what it promises. It's only purpose is to test PCIe 2.0 x16 against PCIe 2.0 x8, x4 and x1.

Woulda been nice if they actually tested PCIe 2.0 (x16) against PCIe 1.1 since this would actually be of some relevance and importance to us. Anyone else think so?

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