Radeon 9800s are still around 500 bucks.. also for performance vs value, they're not good nowadays. The 9000 series is absolute crap, and the 9600s are also pretty down there.MedNez said:Well, I'd suggest a 9800 if it wasn't over the price range, and to be honest I'm not sure where the best place to get a card is, but look into the Radeon 9000 series - the 9600 should be within that price range and is a pretty awesome card =)
...JKDDragon said:for performance vs value, they're not good nowadays.
Someone did that recently, got 10,006 in 05 with a FX-55, 2GB, twin SLi 6800Ultras, stock. Rich bitch.Templar said:You do need a motherboard with 2 PCIe x16 slots, and another video card with SLi. I doubt the cost of this could be justified for another few years (unless you want to crack the 10000 barrier in 3DMark05).
Exactly... that's why I said performance VS value they're bad. I never said performance-wise they were bad. Big difference.MedNez said:...
Performance they're great. Value they're overpriced.
That was the Asus team. Hence the reason I make that reference (10000+ in 3DMark05)JKDDragon said:Someone did that recently, got 10,006 in 05 with a FX-55, 2GB, twin SLi 6800Ultras, stock.
There is a reason a card is branded a 6800 and that's because some of the pipelines are faulty. While all 16 pipelines will run it displays artifacts and is very hard to go back to 12 working pipelines for even the experienced tweaker/programmer.dritz2003 said:You will need to run a tool to unlock the extra pipes, someone on http://www.overclockers.com.au did this with this card and unlocked all 16 pipes!
The 5900 and 5950 are crap. They have performance less than their ATI counterparts at a higher cost. They are also the cards that run with the highest temperature and uses the most power (even more than 6800Ultra with 2 molex connectors), meaning noisier fans and less overclocking ability.RUB!X said:what do u guys think about 5900 ... are they good for the money?
It wasn't the Asus team. It was some random rich guy.Templar said:That was the Asus team. Hence the reason I make that reference (10000+ in 3DMark05)
Good point. If you're not planning to get another card for a few good years, then it will be smart to get a SM3.0 card, such as one of the Geforce 6 range. Reason why I opted for the X800 though was firstly I planned to get another card within two years, secondly, PS 3.0 didn't seemed to make any sort of big fps difference in current titles utilizing it in which the game itself was built on PS 2.0.. e.g the Far Cry (and it's 1.1 patch) I'd only be worrying about SM3.0 if you didn't intend on getting another card until after games built upon a 3.0 foundation became released en masse. (or in my case, until after Unreal 3 comes out).Melkor said:id say that if you are looking for a long term graphics card, youd need to go for geforce 6xxx rather than a 5xxx, as iirc they are more compliant with directx 9 and pixel shader 3.0. So I would also recommend either going for a 6600 gt or do what im doing and wait for a cheaper 6800 gt/ultra