smackababy
Lifer
I am thinking of upgrading to help future proof my system even more. Worth the $100 or so for the step-up? There is nothing wrong with my 260, just pondering more power.
Originally posted by: smackababy
Worth the $100 or so for the step-up?
QFT. But I will concede that the OP's money is his to spend as he wishes.Originally posted by: Azn
Why do people insist future proofing their computers?
By the time you future proof it there's going to be a video card 50% faster or even 2x as fast the card that you paid $400 4 months ago. Either you buy high end GPU because this is what you want at the resolution you want to play or don't buy a video card to future proof it. It's a bad idea especially with computer video cards that drop in price every month.
We already know 40nm faster GPU is coming this year. Why not just keep what you have and upgrade to new GPU when they come out?
Originally posted by: Azn
We already know 40nm faster GPU is coming this year. Why not just keep what you have and upgrade to new GPU when they come out?
Originally posted by: smackababy
I suppose I did not mean future proofing. The next time I will most likely upgrade is in a few years (hoping for at least 3, CPU permitting). I was really wondering if the $100 spent now for the upgrade would improve life of my card.
No need to apologize for the use of the term, future proofing usually does not make sense, as there will often be a faster/cheaper alternative to negate any benefit from the initial future-proofing outlay. However, there's certainly a few recent examples that do make sense with regard to future-proofing:Originally posted by: smackababy
I suppose I did not mean future proofing. The next time I will most likely upgrade is in a few years (hoping for at least 3, CPU permitting). I was really wondering if the $100 spent now for the upgrade would improve life of my card.
EVGA and BFG rarely drop the MSRP/Step-Up basis pricing and they certainly don't change based on market pricing. Its only happened once iirc with the launch price drops on the GTX 200 series. You can still leverage price differences but you'll have to do it yourself via Ebay, FS/FT etc. But ya if you don't really have performance issues at your resolutons/settings in the games you play, then there's really no point.Originally posted by: smackababy
I think I am going to ponder this one. I still have awhile for my step up and I'm currently "upgrading" to water cooling. I wouldn't mind an over all performance boost on things. I think Crysis is the only real thing that I don't have amazing fps in, and tbh, that game wasn't very good. I think I will wait it out until right before my step-up is running out and maybe get a better deal on the gtx285 if prices drop any.
While its true the GTX 260 can come close to the 280 once you overclock it, the 280 pulls away again if you overclock it as well. Not to mention the 285 overclocks better than the 65nm and 55nm B2 260s, it also benefits more from each incremental clock increase.Originally posted by: Grooveriding
If you overclock your 260 as much as it can take, the different will really not be noticeable between the two cards, I think the only game you'd notice a difference in is Crysis. Unless you game at 2560x1600.
I have a 260 216 and a 280. I can't tell the difference using either rig. This is at 1920x1200.
Cheers
Originally posted by: chizow
EVGA and BFG rarely drop the MSRP/Step-Up basis pricing and they certainly don't change based on market pricing. Its only happened once iirc with the launch price drops on the GTX 200 series. You can still leverage price differences but you'll have to do it yourself via Ebay, FS/FT etc. But ya if you don't really have performance issues at your resolutons/settings in the games you play, then there's really no point.Originally posted by: smackababy
I think I am going to ponder this one. I still have awhile for my step up and I'm currently "upgrading" to water cooling. I wouldn't mind an over all performance boost on things. I think Crysis is the only real thing that I don't have amazing fps in, and tbh, that game wasn't very good. I think I will wait it out until right before my step-up is running out and maybe get a better deal on the gtx285 if prices drop any.
While its true the GTX 260 can come close to the 280 once you overclock it, the 280 pulls away again if you overclock it as well. Not to mention the 285 overclocks better than the 65nm and 55nm B2 260s, it also benefits more from each incremental clock increase.Originally posted by: Grooveriding
If you overclock your 260 as much as it can take, the different will really not be noticeable between the two cards, I think the only game you'd notice a difference in is Crysis. Unless you game at 2560x1600.
I have a 260 216 and a 280. I can't tell the difference using either rig. This is at 1920x1200.
Cheers
Originally posted by: chizow
EVGA and BFG rarely drop the MSRP/Step-Up basis pricing and they certainly don't change based on market pricing. Its only happened once iirc with the launch price drops on the GTX 200 series. You can still leverage price differences but you'll have to do it yourself via Ebay, FS/FT etc. But ya if you don't really have performance issues at your resolutons/settings in the games you play, then there's really no point.Originally posted by: smackababy
I think I am going to ponder this one. I still have awhile for my step up and I'm currently "upgrading" to water cooling. I wouldn't mind an over all performance boost on things. I think Crysis is the only real thing that I don't have amazing fps in, and tbh, that game wasn't very good. I think I will wait it out until right before my step-up is running out and maybe get a better deal on the gtx285 if prices drop any.
While its true the GTX 260 can come close to the 280 once you overclock it, the 280 pulls away again if you overclock it as well. Not to mention the 285 overclocks better than the 65nm and 55nm B2 260s, it also benefits more from each incremental clock increase.Originally posted by: Grooveriding
If you overclock your 260 as much as it can take, the different will really not be noticeable between the two cards, I think the only game you'd notice a difference in is Crysis. Unless you game at 2560x1600.
I have a 260 216 and a 280. I can't tell the difference using either rig. This is at 1920x1200.
Cheers
Perhaps, but it wouldn't be accurate to say the GTX 260 is just as fast because you can't discern a difference when both are overclocked, unless perhaps you play with Vsync on and the overclock was enough to push you over 60 FPS always.Originally posted by: Grooveriding
I'm sure that's true. I have both cards overclocked though, and I really cannot discern any difference in any game, but Crysis. Which feels a bit more smooth on the 280. There really is not much difference between the two cards, at least in my experience.
That's incorrect, at least for EVGA. They subtract rebate amount from the purchase price, they always have and check it to your serial # when you apply for step-up.Originally posted by: ExarKun333
Don't forget that you can enjoy a MIR and THEN use the full purchase price toward the step-up. This increases the base purchase and ends up applying that MIR toward the high-end card...
Originally posted by: smackababy
I suppose I did not mean future proofing. The next time I will most likely upgrade is in a few years (hoping for at least 3, CPU permitting). I was really wondering if the $100 spent now for the upgrade would improve life of my card.
Originally posted by: error8
Originally posted by: Azn
We already know 40nm faster GPU is coming this year. Why not just keep what you have and upgrade to new GPU when they come out?
Or, why not get the expensive card now and you can sell it for more later, to upgrade to a good 40 nm one. It's almost the same thing after all, the difference is that he'll be able to enjoy games "better" with the GTX 285, until the next 40 nm are out.
If you can't see the difference between a 260 and 280, I'd say you'd have a hard time seeing the difference upgrading to a 295 or 4870X2. Especially if you're just eye balling it and calling it a day.Originally posted by: Grooveriding
The topic of the thread was if this was a worthwhile upgrade, my point is just, as an owner of both a GTX 260 and a 280, I cannot tell the difference. So it's not worth it.
If you want a worthwhile upgrade, get the 295 on stepup, buy a second 260 if you have an SLI MB, or sell your 260 and buy a 4870X2.
Those are the only options that are going to show you a real upgrade in performance, the 260 vs the 280 is hardly anything.
Originally posted by: chizow
If you can't see the difference between a 260 and 280, I'd say you'd have a hard time seeing the difference upgrading to a 295 or 4870X2. Especially if you're just eye balling it and calling it a day.Originally posted by: Grooveriding
The topic of the thread was if this was a worthwhile upgrade, my point is just, as an owner of both a GTX 260 and a 280, I cannot tell the difference. So it's not worth it.
If you want a worthwhile upgrade, get the 295 on stepup, buy a second 260 if you have an SLI MB, or sell your 260 and buy a 4870X2.
Those are the only options that are going to show you a real upgrade in performance, the 260 vs the 280 is hardly anything.