Building a New PC, need advise on Video Card

CooperWBC

Junior Member
May 16, 2012
1
0
0
Hey guys, thanks in advance for any/all advice you can give. Right now I'm trying to do some research for a few computer i'm planning to build in a few week to replace my 4 year old PC. The area of knowledge that I'm weakest on at the moment is video cards, and I am hoping that you guys will be able to help give me a recommendation, or point me in the direction of what will be right for me.

System Specifications:

I. Processor/CPU:

Intel Core i5-3570K Ivy Bridge 3.4GHz

II. Current Graphics Card:

EVGA nVidia GeForce 9600 GT

III. Display Resolution:

Right now I'm running two monitors. My main monitor is at 1920x1080, and my secondary is at 1680x1050.

My immediate goal would be to maintain the monitors that I have, and hopefully next summer upgrade the second monitor to a 1920x1080 or a 1920x1200 (wooo 16:10)

IV. Power Supply Unit Specification (Brand, Wattage, Ampage, Age). If possible, please provide a link to a website containing the power supply specifications:

I have not chosen a power supply at this point, I am planning on selecting a video card first, and then choosing a power supply to match the needs of my system (CPU/Mobo/vidcard)

V. Case Specifications(N/A, Model, Length, Low Profile, Cooling, HTPC, Water, Silent):

Right now, this is the case that I am looking at.

Purchase Details:

I. Budget? Please be sure to include currency (If not USD), retailer preferences & specify whether rebates are a viable option.

Right now i'm looking for something around the $200-300 range, but would be willing to go a bit higher if I can justify it. THe plan is to use this computer for another 3-4 years at least, so i'd like to buy a good one now that'll last me a ways into the future.

II. Any particular preferences (Manufacturer[nV or AMD], Brand[XFX, Sapphire, EVGA, etc], Cooling Solutions)?

I'm open to suggestion on manufacturer and brand. I've generally always been a nVidia guy but don't care. I've also been very happy with my EVGA, and feel more comfortable with brands I know of (EVGA, Gigabyte, Asus), but willing to check out any brand you recommend

I'd prefer to get a PCI 3.0 Card to make the most out of the Ivy Bridge CPU and the mother board i bought.

III. Do you plan to have any Multi-GPU solutions such as Crossfire or SLI?

I'd personally prefer to keep it to a single video card. I'm building the PC to play games, but i'm not that hard core of a gamer. I'd imagine that I could get better performance on a single good card then 2 cheaper cards. But i'm not sure on this, and is why i'm asking you guys here. :)

IV. Have you previously looked at a product(s) which you feel would fit your needs?

I've looked at many, but have nothing that has stood out so far.

V. What are your needs for this GPU? Which games(If any)do you intend to play? If you have this information at hand, what are the desired detail levels?

The computer will be mostly used for gaming. The main games I have played is the Dragon Age Games, Mass Effect Games, Left 4 Dead 1/2, Star Craft 2, Portal 2, FFXI, SWtoR. After i get my new computer built i'm planing to get Skyrim and Diablo 3.

VI. Do you plan on overclocking the card you intend to purchase?

No, but it would be nice to have the option. I've selected my CPU/MoBo with the idea of playing around with over clocking it a bit. Wouldn't mind being able to do it on the video card, but not that terribly concerned about it.

Additional Notes

Feel free to add any details that you feel were not covered within this template!

My monitors that I'm using now are both DVI, so a card that I could plug them both into would be nice ;-)

I'm really open to suggestions. I'd like to keep it on as much of a budget as possible, but i'm willing to spend a bit more on the card to get a decent one that will give me good FPS in some of these newer games.

I'm a little concerned about heat, so a GPU with a decent cooling aperatise would be nice. I've debating about doing water cooling for the CPU/GPU, but think i'd perfer to keep it air cooled. if there is a quality water cooling option available i'd be interested in hearing about it though. :)

Thanks again in advance for your help. :)
 

kami

Lifer
Oct 9, 1999
17,627
5
81
A radeon 7850 fits in the middle of your price range and will give you GTX 560ti / GTX 570 performance (depending on the game). A 560ti 448 core is also good but its about $40 more than a 7850 for similar performance.

If you go used you can probably find a good deal on a GTX 580 possibly even with warranty left.

However, if you want the card to last you 3-4 years like you say, I would STRONGLY suggest to save an extra $100 (or cut $100 from your case budget - plenty of good cases in the $100 range) and get a GTX 670 at $399.
 

blastingcap

Diamond Member
Sep 16, 2010
6,654
5
76
If you waited 4 years surely you can wait another 4 months right? By then the GTX 660 should be on the verge of launching and be well within your budget.
 

bryanW1995

Lifer
May 22, 2007
11,144
32
91
GTX 670 for $399 is by far your best option.

Nice case btw, I think that will be my next one.
 

Jaydip

Diamond Member
Mar 29, 2010
3,691
21
81
7850 is the best bang for buck card right now.D3 is out and u don't wanna miss it ;).By the way OP I have the same case and its excellent.
 

jmgamer

Member
Mar 16, 2012
36
0
0
Get a 7850 for $250, asus and sapphire models have gotten good reviews

or gtx 670 for $399 if you want to blow more money
 

Zebo

Elite Member
Jul 29, 2001
39,398
19
81
7850 is the only card to buy between $200-$350 so choice is easy.