Always. Really. 5770 would be faster than a 4890 if it weren't an issue. But it isn't, and even at the lowliest resolution the 4890 is virtually always faster.
I think it's really just a matter of benchmarks. I suggest reading benchmarks with minimum FPS, as 128-bit seems to have a bit of an issue there. As long as you see benchmarks and know what you'll getting, it shouldn't matter what bit it is. General rule of thumb, 5770 is a little slower than a 4870 and GTX 260. You probably already know this, so I'm just a bit confused as to what you want to know.
1200MHz at 128-bit is equal to 600MHz 256-bit. So core/mem the 4870 is effectively 750/900 and the 5770 is 850/600. The extra bit on the clock usually isn't enough to make up for the hit. If you use 256-bit DDR5 as your main idea, then just divide 128-bit in half.
A 128bit bus becomes an issue when it results in lower overall memory bandwidth.
The width of the bus itself on its own is meaningless. A 128-bit bus with 4GHz memory will have the same bandwidth as a 256-bit bus with 2GHz memory.
The main thing to look at is overall performance, since the number of bits in the memory bus alone is pretty meaningless, and even memory bandwidth alone won't tell you a huge amount.
So how about the gtx 260 448 bit gddr3 bandwidth.
How do you do the math?
Thanks
The gts 250's banwidth is 70gb. How does that compare to say my 128 bit hd5750 at 1375 (5500) memory?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comparison_of_Nvidia_graphics_processing_units#GeForce_200_Series
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Compar...ocessing_units#Evergreen_.28HD_5xxx.29_series
Easy way to check out the memory bandwidth of various cards.
HD5750 is 73.6GB/s vs 70.4GB/s for the GT250 (and 111.9GB/s for the GTX260)
But again, memory bandwidth isn't everything.
1150mhz gddr5 is 1150x4 for 4600mhz effectiveThanks but is there a calculation to determine the bandwidth?
I'd like to know how much bandwidth extra I got from my overclock.
Stock memory 1150 vs overclocked @ 1375.
Funny they have the 5830's specs in there!
Did you notice that?
Like some others has mentioned, the 128bit bus may not look great, but with the DDR5 ram its much less of a issue like it used to be. Some 128Bit DDR5 buses are pushing 256Bit DDR3 numbers.
The biggest buster for low memory bandwidth is running lots of AA in your games. And also depending on the resolutions you are wanting to run.
Just my penny.
Jason
I run 1920X1200 with some AA
like some others has mentioned, the 128bit bus may not look great, but with the ddr5 ram its much less of a issue like it used to be. Some 128bit ddr5 buses are pushing 256bit ddr3 numbers.
The biggest buster for low memory bandwidth is running lots of aa in your games. And also depending on the resolutions you are wanting to run.
Just my penny.
jason