Yet another recommend-a-card thread

Rhythmdvl

Junior Member
Jan 25, 2000
22
0
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Well, thanks to the wonderful help, advice, and information I?ve received here, I?m proudly staring at a Dell 2408WFP, and I?d like to upgrade the video card.

Budget: Somewhere around $200. I can go up to about $250 or so, if it?ll make a substantial difference.
Existing hardware: An Asus M2N4-SLI, AMD 64x2 4800, 2GB RAM running WinXP.
Replacing: An EVGA 7800GTX
Timing: I?d like to swap the cards out next weekend, but I?m not that impatient if there?s good reason to wait an extra week.

Few things:

First, I?ve checked the motherboard manual and the Asus Web site, and I can?t find any mention of a version for the PCI-e slot. Barring my being an idiot (always a strong possibility), I assume that means it?s a v.1.0 slot. Are 2.0 cards fully backwards compatible, or will there be driver or other headaches waiting for me?

Second, given the limits of the above CPU/motherboard/OS combination, will the performance of a modern $200 card be overkill? If I can max out the settings of HL2 now, will I notice a difference (e.g., more detail in the reflections, sharper lighting effects)?

Third, in looking around on Newegg, it seems like a lot of cards carry virtually identical specs (OC aside). For example, there are eight 4850s, all virtually identical save brand/game combination. I?ve liked the service I?ve gotten from Evga, but really have nothing to compare it to. Does brand make a difference, or should I just go with whichever combo deal suits me?

Thanks!

Rhythm
 

Red Storm

Lifer
Oct 2, 2005
14,233
234
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4850 is the best price/performance card out there right now. I'm not sure which of the brands offers a lifetime warranty though.
 

error8

Diamond Member
Nov 28, 2007
3,204
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Originally posted by: s44
Wait for a 4850 with an adequate HSF.

Even though 4850 runs terribly hot on stock cooler, it's not going to crash or burn during gaming. So, he could just get it now and buy an aftermarket cooler after, if he wants.