Poor performance from 6800XT

PCMarine

Diamond Member
Oct 13, 2002
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Hey all,

So I recently purchased an open box AGP Asus nvidia 6800XT from newegg. I popped it into an Athlon XP 2600+, 512mb ram (PC-133) PC which previously ran a GF4 Ti4200. My main purpose for the upgrade was to play HL2/source games well.

The computer works fine in windows, but when playing source games, the performance is nothing like I expected. FPS is in the 10s-30s (optimistically), usually regardless of settings(!), and overall marginal, if any, improvement over the ti4200.

Does the card throttle the power if it gets hot? underpowered (running a antec 330watt trupower)?

Thanks for any help
 

ForumMaster

Diamond Member
Feb 24, 2005
7,792
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first i would suggest, it to get a new mobo with support for DDR ram. it will have a significant performance increase. BTW, did you connect the card to the PSU? a 6800 usually requires more power via a molex connector. also, i would suggest you upgrade your PSU to something with more amps on the +12V line.
 

PCMarine

Diamond Member
Oct 13, 2002
3,277
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Ok, so I benchmarked the system. I also unlocked the extra 8 pipelines and all of that jazz and scored 3055 in 3dmark2005. CS Source is better after unlocking the extra features, but still isnt as fluid as I would expect.

Any thoughts?
 

pkrush

Senior member
Dec 5, 2005
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Your main problem is not enough RAM, and what you do have is too slow. However, adding faster RAM would require a new motherboard, which would require a new CPU since Socket A boards are getting scarce now. Your best bet is probably getting a used Socket A motherboard with DDR slots and 1 gigabyte of DDR400 off the FS/FT forums.
 

imported_Kiwi

Golden Member
Jul 17, 2004
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You did realize that "XT" on a video card with an nVidia GPU means the opposite of what it does on an ATI, didn't you?

XT=LE = "Lousy Edition" with a slower core speed, slower RAM, etc. It needs to be both Overclocked as well as unlocked to be "almost" equal to a 6800 plain GPU. Also, the AGP bridge adds an extra slowdown compared to a PCI-e version.