- Apr 17, 2003
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HardOCP
The Bottom Line
There are some ?bad? 7900 video cards out there right now if you are going to shop for the overclocked variety. Again, it seems to me BFGTech is catching less flack than EVGA and XFX, but that is not a scientific observation. Keep in mind that BFGTech does not overclock their cards as high as EVGA or XFX. If I were buying an overclocked 7900 card right now, I would be leaning towards BFGTech or EVGA simply because they have a much better reputation when it comes to warranty, support, and service.
If you have a card to RMA, return it to the card builder, not the retailer. Given the awareness level of this problem at this time I would suggest that you have a much better chance of getting a solid 7900 directly from the card builder.
Lastly, I would not let this scare me away from buying an overclocked GeForce 7900 series video card as all the players are very aware something is going on with the cards and trying their best to make sure the problem is solved. Then again, there does seem to be certain level of risk with buying an overclocked card so a non-overclocked 7900 from a reputable builder might be a smart option. Just remember that when you are buying a video card that you are paying for service, support, and warranty as well as the hardware.
Originally posted by: Cooler
If ATI new PR team is smart they will use Stability as a key selling point for x1900/x1800.
Originally posted by: BFG10K
I've never liked OEM overclocks but I must say my Asus 7800GT has been superb in that department.
Even so I prefer cards to run at reference clocks and be up to the user if they want to overclock.
Interestingly enough, as of writing this, no matter who you got your 7900 series card from, they were still all built by Flextronics in China with the exception of a few VIVO models from XFX, so most of the cards in question are being built to NVIDIA?s demanding specification. Companies like BFGTech, EVGA, and XFX are simply putting their own stickers and maybe cooling on the card then tweaking the BIOS with their own overclock settings.
Originally posted by: nvnews.net
On Freezing Issues - 5/25/06 @ 1:04 pm - By: MikeC - Source: Email
NVIDIA wanted to pass along the following information in regards to "random freezing" issues on overclocked versions of the GeForce 7900 GTX:
In working with our board partners, we discovered the cause of the random slowdown and temporary lockup problems experienced by various users of certain over-clocked 7900 GTX graphics boards.
Essentially, it was a case where the core and/or memory clocks were driven a bit too high above NVIDIA specifications, and the over-clocking margins weren't available on those specific boards.
Users who experience problems should contact the graphics card vendor to fix the problem.
We have learned from our board partners that the situation should now be under control.
Also, in regards to 7900 GTX "Corruption upon exiting a 3D app (3DMark06)":
This is a new issue that has just been reported, and our software team is looking at this.
--Brian Burke, NVIDIA Corporation