Solid kick? LOL. It's overclocked and gets less than a 10% increase
over a non-overclocked 460. Can you say marginal?
On 11/9/2010 1:12 AM, Scoobydo wrote:
And this is a 6850 not the 6870..
And that leaves us with the Asus EAH6850. Asus’s design philosophy is
normally what we’d call “aggressive”, as we have seen a number of
their cards that trade temperature for noise, similar to the XFX. But
this isn’t the case for the EAH6850 – it’s as balanced a card as we
could ask for. It does well enough at cooling while approaching
whisper-quiet noise levels, and even overclocked it manages to keep
the 6850 in check without getting too loud or drawing more power than
is necessary. At 9.5” long Asus did have to make some kind of
tradeoff, but unless you have an extremely cramped case it’s
definitely a reasonable tradeoff. Ignore the ridiculous token
overclock, and you have the Radeon HD 6850 that not only stands above
all others, but can more than give the GTX 460 1GB a solid kick to the
curb.
http://www.anandtech.com/show/4002/amd-radeon-hd-6850-overclocking-roundup-asus-xfx-msi
On Sun, 07 Nov 2010 16:08:20 -0600, Steve Tomporowski
<[email protected]> wrote:
Looked at some benchmarks and I'd have to agree that the 6870 is the
card to get. However, I think I'll wait to pursue that to make sure
that the drivers aren't broken at release or the card doesn't
spontaneously combust in 3d mode ;-).
Steve
On 11/6/2010 2:43 AM, Scoobydo wrote:
Check HardOCP and Anandteck for better reviews of what you're
looking for. The 5830 is worthless for what you want (the 5850 blows
it away and the 6850 is considerably faster than the 5850 so put the
5830 out of any consideration). In my mind it comes down to either
the GTX 460 (my Palit Platinum 1 gig is factory overcloced at 800
MHz and sells for $230 now) or the HD 6870 which is the better of
the two. If I were in the market and had the cash right now it would
be my choice to get the 6870 hands down. The only thing Nvidia is
better at is drivers, supporting games and fold...@home. In a few
short weeks AMD will be coming out with it's newest top of the line
cards ( the 6970 and maybe a 6950) and should meet or beat the GTX
480. We'll see when the NDA's expire and the reviews start to poor
forth. Too rich for my blood though.
I've been toying with the idea of getting a second 5770 for my game
box and do some Crossfire but the reviews make it pretty clear that
two cards use more electricity than a single 5870 which is probably
a little faster and not all games work well with it. I don't want to
draw that much energy and really don't need anything faster to play
L4D 2. I'll just wait for the dust to settle next year and get a
6870 then. That really is the sweet spot in my mind for best value.
On Fri, 05 Nov 2010 18:31:14 -0500, Steve Tomporowski
<[email protected]> wrote:
The GTX 460 looks pretty good. Not too bad in price (I was
thinking under $200., but that can change). I've been looking at
the charts at Toms Hardware and it's really a pain to have to weed
your way out from between all the dual card benchmarks.
Interesting to note that the closest ATI (without going over) to
the 460 is the 5830. However the 5830 looks like it's more
expensive than the 6870 (Newegg prices).
Steve
On 11/4/2010 5:41 PM, Scoobydo wrote:
This is easy if you want a main stream card. Choose either the GTX
460 1 GIG or even better the new HD 6870. Either on will trounce a
GTX 280 and use less power and produce less heat as well.
On Thu, 04 Nov 2010 15:46:48 -0500, Steve Tomporowski
<[email protected]> wrote:
Currently I have an Nvidia 9600 GT in my i7-870 box. The E8500
box has the 280 GTX, so I'd like to replace the 9600 with
something that is a little bit faster than the 280. That is
something with good bang for the bux. Not looking to spend much
this time around. I don't have a prejudice on Nvidia or ATI. In
the far past I got turned off of ATI due to their OpenGL
implementation and the fact that every new driver broke something
else. I'm assuming that under the wing of AMD, that both
situations have gotten much better.
The variety of models has gotten staggering and the numbering has
gotten ridiculous, you can't count on a larger number being a
faster card. I'm doing research now, but I'd like to see what
everybody has experience with.
The E8500 has been my gaming box, but it's time to move it over.
Rather get a new card than swap cards.
Thanks...Steve
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