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seeking vid card upgrade advice

TheMaelstromTheMaelstrom Member UncommonPosts: 393

Hey all,

 

I'm currently running an Nvidia GTX260 and I'm thinking it's time to upgrade. I'd like to keep it under $200. Any suggestions for the best Nvidia < $200? I'm not interested in Radeon cards. (buying from US, not EU, just fyi)

 

Thanks for any advice.

No godless person can comprehend those minute distinctions
in doctrine that provide true believers excuse for mayhem.
-Glen Cook

Comments

  • RidelynnRidelynn Member EpicPosts: 7,383


    Originally posted by TheMaelstrom
    Hey all,
     
    I'm currently running an Nvidia GTX260 and I'm thinking it's time to upgrade. I'd like to keep it under $200. Any suggestions for the best Nvidia < $200? I'm not interested in Radeon cards. (buying from US, not EU, just fyi)
     
    Thanks for any advice.

    Stick with what you got. The nVidia 500 series isn't really competitive in the <$200 market, certainly nothing compelling or worthwhile to upgrade from a GTX260.

  • QuizzicalQuizzical Member LegendaryPosts: 25,353

    The only card that Nvidia has that is competitive on a price/performance basis right now is a GeForce GTX 560 Ti, which is a little over $200.  It should get you about double the performance of your current GeForce GTX 260.

    Nvidia does have lower end cards to sell, too, but they're not competitive with AMD's lineup.  I guess if you want to pay a fanboy tax, you can.  A GeForce GTX 550 Ti isn't any faster than your current card, so that or anything slower would make no sense as an upgrade.

    Nvidia's next generation of cards, Kepler, is supposed to launch this year.  Rumors say that the first cards could launch in a couple of months or so.  Nvidia might also be competitive again, after losing badly in performance per watt the last two generations, and performance per mm^2 the last three.  Both of those feed significantly into performance per dollar of cost to build the cards, and that affects prices at retail.  That's why Nvidia mostly isn't competitive on a price/performanc basis right now.  At the very least, Kepler will probably be a larger than normal improvement over the last generation, if only because Fermi was a disaster.

  • TheMaelstromTheMaelstrom Member UncommonPosts: 393

    Thanks for the advice guys. Looks like I should just stick with my GTX260 for the time being. I'm hoping it'll handle Tera / Firefall / Diablo 3 on max. I'm playing the D3 beta and getting some hitching, but I'm hoping it's just a server issue and not a video card issue. My rig is more than capable, including a quad core 3GHz and 12G of RAM.

    No godless person can comprehend those minute distinctions
    in doctrine that provide true believers excuse for mayhem.
    -Glen Cook

  • QuizzicalQuizzical Member LegendaryPosts: 25,353

    If it's hitching as in, the frame rate isn't entirely smooth, then it would be very unusual for server issues to cause that.  A processor, video card, or hard drive could easily cause such hitching, though.

  • RidelynnRidelynn Member EpicPosts: 7,383

    Hitching like rubber banding would be indicative of something with the network or server though.

  • SuperXero89SuperXero89 Member UncommonPosts: 2,551

    I went through like an entire summer of playing games that had issues with ATI cards until those issues were resolved via driver updates.  Nvidia has issues too (Dragon Age II and Crysis come to mind), but by and large, I'm more than happy with the Nvidia card currently running in my system even if the newer ATI cards are theoretically more powerful.

  • PalladinPalladin Member UncommonPosts: 430

    http://www.tomshardware.com/charts/2011-gaming-graphics-charts/benchmarks,123.html

     

    I have been using this site for the past 10 or so years. Any time I am planning to build a new PC I go here and review the lastest greats everything. Its a pretty good site for info. I'm sure everyone has their own favorite sites for such things.

     

    PS my opinion from another thread and things to consider.

    Normal Television (pre HDTV) ran at about 30 fps. HDTV runs at about 60 fps. I honesly do not think the human eye will notice any significan change in FPS past 60fps. I would sugest getting a vid card that will consistantly give between 30-60 fps andy more and its wasted money.

     

    I don't know anything about your current vid card  and what games you play or the fps you get  but if its between 30-60 fps you don't need a new vid card.

    If you are getting the performance I suggest above with your current vid card you might want to research processor, memory ssd upgrades instead.

     

    I did not see any mention about your monitor. If you have a crap monitor no upgrade will make it display bettter. I revently bought a flat panel 27" monitor and upgraded my video cable to Digital and it made a huge diff in what I see onscreen.

    AMD Phenum II x4 3.6Ghz 975 black edition
    8 gig Ram
    Nvidia GeForce GTX 760

  • Loke666Loke666 Member EpicPosts: 21,441

    Upgrading to a 560 isn´t really worth it unless you really needs dx 11.

    Either you need to pay more and get a 570 or you should ask around and see if you can´t get a second hand 290 card from someone that is upgrading (or 280 works as well).

    While a 560 is slightly better than the 260 it isn´t really worth the price.

  • Loke666Loke666 Member EpicPosts: 21,441

    Originally posted by Palladin

    http://www.tomshardware.com/charts/2011-gaming-graphics-charts/benchmarks,123.html

    I have been using this site for the past 10 or so years. Any time I am planning to build a new PC I go here and review the lastest greats everything. Its a pretty good site for info. I'm sure everyone has their own favorite sites for such things.

    Yeah, me too. Tom rocks. :)

  • aranhaaranha Member UncommonPosts: 171

    Originally posted by Loke666

    Upgrading to a 560 isn´t really worth it unless you really needs dx 11.

    Either you need to pay more and get a 570 or you should ask around and see if you can´t get a second hand 290 card from someone that is upgrading (or 280 works as well).

    While a 560 is slightly better than the 260 it isn´t really worth the price.

    The 560 is alot better than the 260 due to the cuda cores which is the big diffrence in GPU card performance. Also the 260 & 280 are very unstable cards.

    GTX 560:

     


    GPU Engine Specs:

    CUDA Cores

    384

    Graphics Clock (MHz)

    822

    Processor Clock (MHz)

    1645

    Texture Fill Rate (billion/sec)

    52.5

    Memory Specs:

    Memory Clock (Gbps)

    4008

    Standard Memory Config

    1024 MB GDDR5

    Memory Interface Width

    256-bit

    Memory Bandwidth (GB/sec)

    128

     

     


    GTX 260


     



    GPU Engine Specs:

    CUDA Cores

    192

    Graphics Clock (MHz)

    576 MHz

    Processor Clock (MHz)

    1242 MHz

    Texture Fill Rate (billion/sec)

    36.9 

    Memory Specs:

    Memory Clock (MHz)

    999 

    Standard Memory Config

    896 MB 

    Memory Interface Width

    448-bit

    Memory Bandwidth (GB/sec)

    111.9

     


     

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