Crossfire VS 1 higher end card.

Animage

Member
May 27, 2007
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0
0
I am upgrading my computer to make my fiance a computer. I am currently running a 8800GT. Figure im upgrading to a crossfire capable board i might as well upgrade my video card. what im wondering is if i would get better performance out of 1 higher end card or 2 mid range cards, examples of what im looking at below. My thought is also if i get the higher end card that i can get one 2-3 months from now cheaper and xfire it them maybe too.

"Higher End" Card : View Me

"Mid Range" Card(s) : View Me

Any and all help appreciated.
 

SickBeast

Lifer
Jul 21, 2000
14,377
19
81
I wouldn't do any of those upgrades.

Your 8800GT is fine.

You should upgrade when you need to, not just because you can.
 

alcoholbob

Diamond Member
May 24, 2005
6,390
469
126
Single card for the mainstream user. Hell, even most enthusiasts don't want to deal with tweaking just to get a game to run; spending money on hardware then have performance fail, go on the forums to tweak, tweak, tweak...no point.
 

cbn

Lifer
Mar 27, 2009
12,968
221
106
Originally posted by: Animage
I am upgrading my computer to make my fiance a computer. I am currently running a 8800GT. Figure im upgrading to a crossfire capable board i might as well upgrade my video card. what im wondering is if i would get better performance out of 1 higher end card or 2 mid range cards, examples of what im looking at below. My thought is also if i get the higher end card that i can get one 2-3 months from now cheaper and xfire it them maybe too.

"Higher End" Card : View Me

"Mid Range" Card(s) : View Me

Any and all help appreciated.

I think two 4830s might beat one 4870 512 MB.

Pretty soon you will also be able to buy HD4770 for $99 retail (less with rebates). This is a 40nm card that has 96% of the computing power of GD4850 but only uses 80 watts (which lowers strain on the PSU)

Maybe you should run two of these on a AMD 790FX board? I'm sure Anadtech will be posting results soon. Nice thing about 790FX AM2+ boards is that they only cost ~$120 but can run dual x16 PCI-E 2.0 lanes. This is good for the future if you plan on keeping your board for at least 3+ years. (I don't think it will be long before single GPUs start using more than x8 of a PCI-E 2.0 lane. In fact, as early as HD58xx and GT300 might we might see that.)