- Aug 25, 2001
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Currently, I have a couple of Core2Quad rigs that I fixed up, and then mothballed. I might sell them. (I'm kind of attached to them, though, I've had them so long, and they've always done well for me.)
I currently have a couple of 2GB GDDR5 R7 260X cards in them, which take a single PCI-E 6-pin power connector.
Would the GTX1050 2GB (looking at the Asus dual-fan model from Newegg on ebay for $104.99 FS), be an improvement? Enough to be worth it, when paired up with a Core2Quad?
Are there any people here that are currently running a GTX 1050 (or a higher GTX 10-series card), on a Core2Quad rig? Does the Core2Quad limit them too much?
Is the Core2Quad effectively around a Haswell i3, when it comes to gaming performance, or does "it depend"?
Thinking of games like GTA V, Witcher 3, and Crysis 3. Would a 2.83Ghz Core2Quad, with 8GB of DDR2, and a GTX 1050, be able to play these games at 1080P? Even on med or possibly low?
I've got some other cards too, some GTX 950 2GB GDDR5 (one PCI-E 6-pin), some R9 270X 2GB GDDR5 (two 6-pin), some HD 7950 3GB GDDR5 (two 6-pin), and some R7 250X 2GB DDR3 (one 6-pin).
Part of the problem is, the PSU in those two Core2Quad rigs only has a single PCI-E 6-pin power connector (Antec VP-450, around 4-5 years old).
I could replace the PSUs with some EVGA 500W/600W PSUs I have (new), but that would be extra work.
Would an R9 270X 2GB or HD 7950 3GB be overkill for a 2.83Ghz Core2Quad? I think that they probably would be.
Is the GTX 1050 faster or slower than the R9 270X and 7950 3GB?
I've got some Haswell G3258 OCed (4.0+Ghz) rigs, and some G4560 (3.5Ghz dual-core KBL w/HT, no OC) rigs, that could use dGPUs too.
Just trying to allocate my cards in such a way that they match up with the CPUs, and are saleable.
Was originally just going to buy a pair of GTX 1050 cards, now that they're $105 shipped for a dual-fan 2GB model, and put those with my G4560 rigs to sell, for $500-600, and leave the R7 260X 2GB GDDR5 cards in the Core2Quad rigs. And maybe, put the GTX 950 2GB GDDR5 cards back with the Haswell rigs. Unsure.
I currently have a couple of 2GB GDDR5 R7 260X cards in them, which take a single PCI-E 6-pin power connector.
Would the GTX1050 2GB (looking at the Asus dual-fan model from Newegg on ebay for $104.99 FS), be an improvement? Enough to be worth it, when paired up with a Core2Quad?
Are there any people here that are currently running a GTX 1050 (or a higher GTX 10-series card), on a Core2Quad rig? Does the Core2Quad limit them too much?
Is the Core2Quad effectively around a Haswell i3, when it comes to gaming performance, or does "it depend"?
Thinking of games like GTA V, Witcher 3, and Crysis 3. Would a 2.83Ghz Core2Quad, with 8GB of DDR2, and a GTX 1050, be able to play these games at 1080P? Even on med or possibly low?
I've got some other cards too, some GTX 950 2GB GDDR5 (one PCI-E 6-pin), some R9 270X 2GB GDDR5 (two 6-pin), some HD 7950 3GB GDDR5 (two 6-pin), and some R7 250X 2GB DDR3 (one 6-pin).
Part of the problem is, the PSU in those two Core2Quad rigs only has a single PCI-E 6-pin power connector (Antec VP-450, around 4-5 years old).
I could replace the PSUs with some EVGA 500W/600W PSUs I have (new), but that would be extra work.
Would an R9 270X 2GB or HD 7950 3GB be overkill for a 2.83Ghz Core2Quad? I think that they probably would be.
Is the GTX 1050 faster or slower than the R9 270X and 7950 3GB?
I've got some Haswell G3258 OCed (4.0+Ghz) rigs, and some G4560 (3.5Ghz dual-core KBL w/HT, no OC) rigs, that could use dGPUs too.
Just trying to allocate my cards in such a way that they match up with the CPUs, and are saleable.
Was originally just going to buy a pair of GTX 1050 cards, now that they're $105 shipped for a dual-fan 2GB model, and put those with my G4560 rigs to sell, for $500-600, and leave the R7 260X 2GB GDDR5 cards in the Core2Quad rigs. And maybe, put the GTX 950 2GB GDDR5 cards back with the Haswell rigs. Unsure.