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PC....
http://www.photech.com.au/Controls/Products/ViewProductDetails.aspx?ProductID=5366
Moniter...
http://www.photech.com.au/Controls/Products/ViewProductDetails.aspx?ProductID=5105
they are in Australian dollars, please give me any info about what games will look on this.
is the 8800GTS 312mb good ??
help me out here, please feel free to ramble on Greg_888_v8
Great rig m8. But i think you should get 8800 GTS whit 640MB since you will be playing in 1680x1050. Otherwise it is great. Â
[QUOTE="Greg_888_v8"]PC....
http://www.photech.com.au/Controls/Products/ViewProductDetails.aspx?ProductID=5366
Moniter...
http://www.photech.com.au/Controls/Products/ViewProductDetails.aspx?ProductID=5105
they are in Australian dollars, please give me any info about what games will look on this.
is the 8800GTS 312mb good ??
help me out here, please feel free to ramble on domke13
Great rig m8. But i think you should get 8800 GTS whit 640MB since you will be playing in 1680x1050. Otherwise it is great.
640mb isn't really need until you get to 1920x1200 or higher.Â
[QUOTE="domke13"][QUOTE="Greg_888_v8"]PC....
http://www.photech.com.au/Controls/Products/ViewProductDetails.aspx?ProductID=5366
Moniter...
http://www.photech.com.au/Controls/Products/ViewProductDetails.aspx?ProductID=5105
they are in Australian dollars, please give me any info about what games will look on this.
is the 8800GTS 312mb good ??
help me out here, please feel free to ramble on LordEC911
Great rig m8. But i think you should get 8800 GTS whit 640MB since you will be playing in 1680x1050. Otherwise it is great.
640mb isn't really need until you get to 1920x1200 or higher.Â
Yeah, but it is more future proof.Â
640mb isn't really need until you get to 1920x1200 or higher. LordEC911It's kind of already necessary if you want to run games at Ultra Quality settings (Doom 3, Quake 4, Prey), or with higher levels of AA/AF.
The extra RAM will at least ensure the card can retain playability with high eye candy settings in the upcoming games, whereas the 320MB GTS will start to seriously degrade.Â
with this rig, will i be able to run two cards together in the future ??
like is it called SLI or PCI-e ?? does it matter on the motherboard or the original card ?Greg_888_v8
With nVidia (the card you're going with) it's called "SLI" or "Scalable Link Interface." It was designed by nVidia in late 2005 to make it easier to run multiple nVidia cards (namely the THEN new GeForce 7800) with a single motherboard. To use SLI, you need a SLI-Approved mother-board, which are pretty cheap now and easy enough to find. You'll also want a good power-supply. 550 watts should be enough, but considering the price, I'd just stick a 700 watt power supply in it to future proof the machine.
If you want ATI (ATI's new monsterous Radeon 2900 is going to debut soon; it also supports DX10) cards in a dual link format, you'll need to first buy an ATI "Crossfire" approved motherboard, then buy two cards that are Crossfire approved. Either set-up works nicely.
Also, I'm not sure if that mobo supports SLI. Most Intel boards do not have SLI. I'd go with an Asus motherboard.Â
PC....
http://www.photech.com.au/Controls/Products/ViewProductDetails.aspx?ProductID=5366
Moniter...
http://www.photech.com.au/Controls/Products/ViewProductDetails.aspx?ProductID=5105
they are in Australian dollars, please give me any info about what games will look on this.
is the 8800GTS 312mb good ??
help me out here, please feel free to ramble on Greg_888_v8
That is my exact computer down to the wire (cept i need a sound card) but i have 8800 GTS love it, SATA 320 gig of mem love it, get 2 gig though of ram, i am upgrading to the same processer so can't say anything about that yet.
[QUOTE="Greg_888_v8"]PC....
http://www.photech.com.au/Controls/Products/ViewProductDetails.aspx?ProductID=5366
Moniter...
http://www.photech.com.au/Controls/Products/ViewProductDetails.aspx?ProductID=5105
they are in Australian dollars, please give me any info about what games will look on this.
is the 8800GTS 312mb good ??
help me out here, please feel free to ramble on mechwarrior_bob
That is my exact computer down to the wire (cept i need a sound card) but i have 8800 GTS love it, SATA 320 gig of mem love it, get 2 gig though of ram, i am upgrading to the same processer so can't say anything about that yet.
sorry thought it said 1 gig
with this rig, will i be able to run two cards together in the future ??PCI-E is the PCI Express interface that the card is likely using nowadays.
like is it called SLI or PCI-e ?? does it matter on the motherboard or the original card ?Greg_888_v8
nVidia's multi-GPU technology is SLi. ATi's is CrossFire. Your motherboard on the other hand is a P965 chipset, so at best it could support CrossFire, but at worst, neither. There are a lot of P965 motherboards that only have a single PCI-E x16 slot, and therefore would be unable to support any multi-GPU action other than simply having other video cards to link up to multiple monitors.
intel chipsets that have two physical PCI-E x16 connectors are only supporting ATi's CrossFire. And of which, I still haven't heard anything of whether ATi's drivers have finally enabled full Crossfire support on the P965; when ATi first added P965 CF support, it was very incomplete - there was no OpenGL CF acceleration whatsoever.
so should i think about getting a different motherboard ?
somone also mentioned my 550 watts wont be enough for the future ?Greg_888_v8
Yeah, you should think about it. Look at the different Asus boards that are available, as they have an incredibly wide variety.
As for your powersupply, that should be more than enough for two GeForce 8800GS cards... Just remember that newer cards usually use more energy than the previous generation. You should be ok for a LONG time though.Â
so should i think about getting a different motherboard ?If you're serious about SLi, look at the list of SLi-certified PSU's rated to handle 8800GTX's and Ultra's. You more or less would need double that 550W unit to handle a loaded system featuring a pair of 8800's stably.
somone also mentioned my 550 watts wont be enough for the future ?Greg_888_v8
Or if you decide to go CrossFire, you'll also need to find a PSU that can supply 8-pin PCI-E connectors in addition to 6-pin PCI-E, as the HD 2900XT uses one 6-pin and one 8-pin, and who knows what the HD 2900XTX will require for one, much less two in CF.
If you want to do CrossFire, either a motherboard based on the intel 975X chipset, (maybe) the P35 chipset (which would likely require DDR3), or the DFI RD600 motherboard would be your best choices.
If you want SLi, the ideal choice is a 680i motherboard.
It never hurts buying a larger PSU, since it only draws as much power as it needs. But having a larger PSU also means that it is also being more efficient with a (likely much smaller) actual load, and not pumping gobs of heat into your system and your room.
Even if you go CrossFire, it may not be a bad idea to pick up an SLi-certified PSU. Part of the reason is that in order to qualify for "SLi certification", nVidia says that they can't submit the same PSU to ATi for CF certification (for whatever reason). But more often than not, if it's certified to work well in SLi, it should have no problem handling an equivalent CrossFire setup, and vice versa.
As far as PSU brands are concerned, I would consider looking at models from Enermax, OCZ, Corsair, or (if you've got $$$$ to spare) PC Power & Cooling. Or if you decide to pick one up at a local store, check the weight of the PSU by itself. It's rather unscientific, but very often heavier PSU's use better quality metals and electronics inside, so a heavy PSU very often means a quality unit.Â
I would change the monitor over for a Samsung 226bw, thats 22"
It's what I have, and im quite happy with it.
Good rig though, shoud eat any games you throw at it today.
Samulies
Â
some models of samsung got problems, like backlight bleed thru, id go with viewsonic, might be more $ than the lcd he ordered with it tho, dunno
will i be able to max out games like GTR2 ??? and other top end games ?Greg_888_v8With the first computer and monitor you linked us to?
I think you'll be okay as far as GTR2. Even if not maximum in-game eye candy, you'll be able to have almost everything on and on high. I don't know, what are the recommended minimum requirements for GTR2?Â
excellent rig, however i think you should get a GTS 640mb, that's what you will need to max games like crysis and bioshock at 1680x1050filmography
'Nuff said.Â
say in the future.....
if i wanted to upgrade to a kickass 'Nvidia 9900' or cards that are going to be insane in the future...
would i only have to buy the card and upgrade from the 550 PSU ???
[QUOTE="Samulies"]I would change the monitor over for a Samsung 226bw, thats 22"
It's what I have, and im quite happy with it.
Good rig though, shoud eat any games you throw at it today.
riptoe222
Â
some models of samsung got problems, like backlight bleed thru, id go with viewsonic, might be more $ than the lcd he ordered with it tho, dunno
That isnt a samsung problem, but it is Tn pnales problem. You should know that TN panel is the worst of LCD panels on marekt, that has bad viewing angles, backlight bleeding....Â
basically it has more ram,
so if ur playin higher resolutions it would be more better to get 640 mb version
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