Originally posted by: iamtrout
Thanks, that's pretty much what I thought. Getting a card that happens to overclock abnormally high is still pretty much a crapshoot, is it not?
I'm also wondering... I'm going from my 6800NU to hopefully a 7900GT (when they get in stock) and I'm absolutely blown away by the fact that the BGA memory on the 7900GT isn't cooled, or even in touch with a heatsink for that matter! When I overclock the 7900GT will I still have to get some cooling on the memory?
Originally posted by: Extelleron
Not really. Heavily oc'd cards may be speed binned, but generally, in say the 7900GT's case, if XFX has their version @ 560/1650, you'll be able to get it there with a stock 450/1320 card as well, especially on water.
Originally posted by: Scorpion
Originally posted by: Extelleron
Not really. Heavily oc'd cards may be speed binned, but generally, in say the 7900GT's case, if XFX has their version @ 560/1650, you'll be able to get it there with a stock 450/1320 card as well, especially on water.
This tends to go against my logic. I thought XFX gets select chips from nVidia, or they test them themselves to see what speeds they are stable at, and that's how they determine which OC model they go in. So if you buy a 450/1320, then that lends me to believe that it was tested and wasn't capable of going into the higher clocked models, thereby limiting it's OC potential. But I could be wrong...
Originally posted by: firewolfsm
eVGA doesn't speedbin and still gets its OCs almost as high as XFX. Most of the other companies pay nVidia a little extra to get speedbinned cores but i don't think it matters much. There was a 7900GT round up and the eVGA was only 20MHz lower than the XFX in core but 30MHz higher in memory.
Originally posted by: Scorpion
Originally posted by: Extelleron
Not really. Heavily oc'd cards may be speed binned, but generally, in say the 7900GT's case, if XFX has their version @ 560/1650, you'll be able to get it there with a stock 450/1320 card as well, especially on water.
This tends to go against my logic. I thought XFX gets select chips from nVidia, or they test them themselves to see what speeds they are stable at, and that's how they determine which OC model they go in. So if you buy a 450/1320, then that lends me to believe that it was tested and wasn't capable of going into the higher clocked models, thereby limiting it's OC potential. But I could be wrong...