Originally posted by: MagnusTheBrewer
I think you may have misread the review, the HD2900XT requires both.
Originally posted by: MadBoris
Two 6 pins work with no overclocking.
The ATI driver/software makes sure the 8 pin is there for overclocking. So I would say yes, 8 pin will be needed.
I do have the thought that one review was able to bypass the 8 pin requirement by using a 3rd party overclocking tool, but that might be lack of sleep talking from last night.
Originally posted by: Extelleron
Originally posted by: MadBoris
Two 6 pins work with no overclocking.
The ATI driver/software makes sure the 8 pin is there for overclocking. So I would say yes, 8 pin will be needed.
I do have the thought that one review was able to bypass the 8 pin requirement by using a 3rd party overclocking tool, but that might be lack of sleep talking from last night.
You might be able to do that, but that doesn't stop the fact that if you overclock significantly you will use more power than PCI-E 1.0 + 2x 6-pin can provide (225W).
Originally posted by: Matt2
I dunno. Good question.
I'm still considering buying one of the HD2900XT just because of price, but I dont think my Silverstone 560w 36a PSU is going to handle this baby.
A GTX would probably run fine on this PSU making the GTX even cheaper than the HD2900XT when u factor in a new PSU.
Originally posted by: apoppin
Originally posted by: Matt2
I dunno. Good question.
I'm still considering buying one of the HD2900XT just because of price, but I dont think my Silverstone 560w 36a PSU is going to handle this baby.
A GTX would probably run fine on this PSU making the GTX even cheaper than the HD2900XT when u factor in a new PSU.
get the GTX ... you will hate the HD ... later ... like you complain about your noisy xtx
it is *king*
Originally posted by: fern420
has anyone located a place selling 8 power adapters?
Originally posted by: Extelleron
Originally posted by: fern420
has anyone located a place selling 8 power adapters?
A 6-pin connector plugs into the 8-pin slot on the HD 2900XT. Why do you need an adapter?
Originally posted by: Extelleron
Originally posted by: apoppin
Originally posted by: Matt2
I dunno. Good question.
I'm still considering buying one of the HD2900XT just because of price, but I dont think my Silverstone 560w 36a PSU is going to handle this baby.
A GTX would probably run fine on this PSU making the GTX even cheaper than the HD2900XT when u factor in a new PSU.
get the GTX ... you will hate the HD ... later ... like you complain about your noisy xtx
it is *king*
The HD 2900XT is not as loud as the X1800/X1900. I never had a problem with the X1900's noise under stock, but overclocking it was a PITA because it's simply not possible to run at 100% even playing games. The 8800GTS cooler is tolerable even at 100%.
Originally posted by: fern420
Originally posted by: Extelleron
Originally posted by: fern420
has anyone located a place selling 8 power adapters?
A 6-pin connector plugs into the 8-pin slot on the HD 2900XT. Why do you need an adapter?
no offense but they put 8 pins on it for a reason. great news if its true but if it is true why didn't ati just put two 6 pin connectors on the card? the andandtech review says you can do that, stick a 6 pin in the 8 pin connector but your still not going to have the proper wattage hence no over clocking ability. if you do not connect an 8 pin into the card you will no be able to over clock.
Originally posted by: Extelleron
Originally posted by: fern420
Originally posted by: Extelleron
Originally posted by: fern420
has anyone located a place selling 8 power adapters?
A 6-pin connector plugs into the 8-pin slot on the HD 2900XT. Why do you need an adapter?
no offense but they put 8 pins on it for a reason. great news if its true but if it is true why didn't ati just put two 6 pin connectors on the card? the andandtech review says you can do that, stick a 6 pin in the 8 pin connector but your still not going to have the proper wattage hence no over clocking ability. if you do not connect an 8 pin into the card you will no be able to over clock.
Wouldn't an adapter just take up 8-pins and not provide anymore wattage? I thought you needed a true 8-pin connector to actually get the extra wattage, and an adapter would just allow you to connect a 6-pin to 8-pin (which you already can.) Am I wrong?
Originally posted by: Extelleron
Originally posted by: fern420
Originally posted by: Extelleron
Originally posted by: fern420
has anyone located a place selling 8 power adapters?
A 6-pin connector plugs into the 8-pin slot on the HD 2900XT. Why do you need an adapter?
no offense but they put 8 pins on it for a reason. great news if its true but if it is true why didn't ati just put two 6 pin connectors on the card? the andandtech review says you can do that, stick a 6 pin in the 8 pin connector but your still not going to have the proper wattage hence no over clocking ability. if you do not connect an 8 pin into the card you will no be able to over clock.
Wouldn't an adapter just take up 8-pins and not provide anymore wattage? I thought you needed a true 8-pin connector to actually get the extra wattage, and an adapter would just allow you to connect a 6-pin to 8-pin (which you already can.) Am I wrong?
Originally posted by: ExtelleronThe reason I'm not so sure about purchasing the 2900 is how much this reeks of another X1800 -> X1900 launch... I'm not buying a 2900 today if I can get a 65nm 2950 in three or four months.
Originally posted by: humanure
maybe this?
Originally posted by: Extelleron
I thought Corsair was sending out actual 8-pin cables, not some kind of adapter you stick on a 6-pin. I contacted Corsair to get one of the 8-pin PCI-E cables for my HX520. I'm not sure if I'll get an HD 2900XT; it really depends on whether or not performance improves much and if the price drops a little bit more. $350-370 and maybe I'll bite if I can get a buyer for my GTS. The reason I'm not so sure about purchasing the 2900 is how much this reeks of another X1800 -> X1900 launch... I'm not buying a 2900 today if I can get a 65nm 2950 in three or four months.