I think the 9200 SE cards are a
big waste of money. $70 for a 128MB 9200 non-pro isn't bad, but 9200 SE performance is pretty bad. Here's a cut and paste of my post from the FW newegg 1 day sale thread:
The 9200 SE runs at 200MHz core speed, and has 64-bit 166MHz DDR memory (333MHz effective), 2.7GB/s bandwidth
The 9200 non-pro runs at 250MHz core speed, and has 128-bit 200MHz DDR memory (400MHz effective), 6.4GB/s bandwidth
The 9200 pro runs at 300MHz core speed, and has 128-bit 300MHz DDR memory (600MHz effective), 9.6GB/s bandwidth
All 3 9200 models use the RV280 core, which only has 4 pixel pipelines. It's the same core in the Radeon 9000 (RV250), but with AGP8X support (big whoopee!). The older R200 core (Radeon 8500/8500LE/9100) is superior since it has 8 pipelines and 250MHz or 275MHz 128-bit memory (8GB/s or 8.8GB/s bandwidth).
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So yes, the 9200 SE performs the same as a 9000, if the 9000 was crippled by a 64-bit memory interface.

It's the 9200 non-pro that's the same as the 9000. The 9200 SE lags far behind in performance. There are still Radeon 9100 deals available that are much better and cheaper than 9200 SE cards. The 9100 = 250MHz core, 128-bit 250MHz memory (500MHz effective, 8GB/s bandwidth).
And BTW, the 5200 w/128-bit memory interface is faster and cheaper than the 9200 SE.
