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post #101 of 180
post #102 of 180
Thread Starter 
insane

but then the price...will they be able to keep the price down with that performance.
post #103 of 180
That looks familiar .

Also from Expreview
post #104 of 180
Thread Starter 
then again the release date always slips...
post #105 of 180
damn I just can't keep up
post #106 of 180
Thread Starter 
yeah, you can never have the best.

ok someone say it april fools!!!

i so thought it would have been released today, even the link on amazon is gone

ah...here we go:

eVGA e-GeForce 9800 GTX 512 MB DDR3 PCI-Express 2.0 Graphics Card-Lifetime Warranty 512-P3-N871-AR
Other products by EVGA


Price:$369.99 & this item ships for FREE with Super Saver Shipping. Details
Availability: This item will be released on April 4, 2008.
post #107 of 180
Been on the egg since around 12am ET today. Other than tri sli I don't get this card .

Egg
post #108 of 180
Thread Starter 
oh, ah seeing it on evga.com now
post #109 of 180
It seems that it's really barely an improvement over the 8800GTS 512 according to eggers (not always the most reliable but still). Personally it seems I'd wait for the 9900 series if I was building around now
post #110 of 180
I was reading that also...I would prolly hold off on that card unless you really just want to kick some ass until the 9900 Series come out ...However when that happens Ill be unloading the 9800GX2 if anybodys not wanting to pay top dollar for top end
post #111 of 180
Thread Starter 
ASUS GeForce 9800 GTX review
-

By Steven Walton on April 1, 2008
Editor: Julio Franco

Manufacturer: ASUS Post/read user's feedback function ReferThisPage14f38e1e1cdaf84d4d4048e88ff0f3f3(){var rtp;rtp = window.open('https://www.tell-a-friend-king.com/refer/?URL='+escape(document.URL)+'&CODE=14f38e1e1cdaf84d4d4048e88ff0f3f3&JS=1','_blank' ,'width=350,height=530, resizable=yes, status=yes');rtp.focus();}document.write(""); Email this to a frienddocument.write("");
Find videocard prices


Just last week we brought you a review on the GeForce 9800 GX2, and today we have a new ASUS board in our test labs. Powered by the GeForce 9800 GTX chip, we put the brand new chip to the test.
Today will see the official launch of the GeForce 9800 GTX as the third member of the GeForce 9 series. Already we have seen the GeForce 9600 GT performing in the mainstream sector, the 9800 GX2 aimed at the high-end $500+ market, and now the 9800 GTX which sits right in-between. There is also a GeForce 9800 GTS on the way, but we will leave that for another occasion.
But first things first, and without getting fooled by naming conventions, you should know that Nvidia has not gone back to the drawing board with the new GeForce 9 series, meaning that without delving too deep you can find that the GeForce 9 is still based on the same GeForce 8 architecture. We believe Nvidia has done this for two reasons: First, they successfully proved with the GeForce 9800 GX2 that a lot of power was still left untapped. The very expensive dual-GPU card recently demonstrated that it has more than enough power to churn through the latest and most demanding gaming titles. Furthermore, with little pressure from ATI in the high performance segment, Nvidia has been able to reclaim their title without having to develop an entirely new architecture.


The other reason has to do with money, and as any successful business Nvidia has got its own selfish motivations. Given that the original GeForce 8 series cost them something in the range of $400 million dollars to develop, the graphics giant sure is trying to juice it for every last penny possible. Nvidia has effectively kept the G80 architecture alive by shrinking it down from 90nm to 65nm to improve efficiency. If you can see this, your browser doesn't understand IFRAME.

Based on the infamous G92 architecture that we have seen used time and time again, the GeForce 9800 GTX shares very similar specifications to that of the GeForce 8800 GTS 512 graphics card. By now, the G92 has been used on numerous Nvidia graphics cards including the GeForce 8800 GS, 8800 GT, 8800 GTS 512, and the 9800 GX2. Keeping this in mind, it will be interesting to see what makes the new GeForce 9800 GX2 special.
The GeForce 9800 GTX is meant to replace the old 8800 GTX, which is no longer in production as it was rendered impractical by the 8800 GTS 512, which offers similar performance at a fraction of the cost. The new 9800 GTX is said to begin retailing in the $300 to $349 price range, which would place it in a league of its own as there are currently no ATI or Nvidia graphics cards competing there.
The specifications of the GeForce 9800 GTX and the 8800 GTS 512 are indeed very similar, though a feature that is unique to the 9800 GTX is 3-way SLI. As you may have read in our previous reviews, we are not really that excited by SLI (or Crossfire) as we are for truly competent single card solutions. After all, it is likely that you would end up spending well over $1000 for this kind of setup with the 9800 GTX, and the performance scaling is questionable. ASUS provided us with their version of the GeForce 9800 GTX which is the one going out on retail although for the most part it is built closely to match Nvidia’s reference design. Let’s move on to check this new graphics card out in more detail...

http://www.techspot.com/review/92-as...orce-9800-gtx/
post #112 of 180
post #113 of 180
9800GTX - BLAH! Only good for tri-sli or if your step-up is about to expire. BTW, most reviews showing 9800GTXs in tri-sli scaling 1-3%. Two GTXs perform quite well.
post #114 of 180
Thread Starter 
a question about variants: when buying a graphics card here: http://www.evga.com/products/prodlist.asp is it better ;to go with the plain version or the SC, KO or SSC? does this affect your overclocking options?

Based on the hothardware review, quad sli isn't impressive, do you think driver modifications will make a big difference?
post #115 of 180
Quote:
Originally Posted by almmohd View Post
a question about variants: when buying a graphics card here: http://www.evga.com/products/prodlist.asp is it better ;to go with the plain version or the SC, KO or SSC? does this affect your overclocking options?

Based on the hothardware review, quad sli isn't impressive, do you think driver modifications will make a big difference?
1. The SC, KO, and SSC cards are already overclocked...something you can do yourself on the reference card. They charge a premium for removing a possible headache. The OCed cards they sell usually have very little overclocking potential.

2. At this point, the dual-gpu cards are reminding me more and more of the 7950 days. They've been on the market for a short while, and already released a couple of drivers to improve scaling. There may be an additional driver release or two between now and the GT200 (9900-series) release, to better improve scaling - but don't expect too much. From the looks of things, NV is not abandoning the multi-gpu market. So for the long term, quad scaling can do nothing but improve.
post #116 of 180
Quote:
Originally Posted by Buck47 View Post
1. The SC, KO, and SSC cards are already overclocked...something you can do yourself on the reference card. They charge a premium for removing a possible headache. The OCed cards they sell usually have very little overclocking potential.
Don't forget that that stock oc'd is guaranteed/warrantied though. You buy the stock card it's not a given that you will reach the speeds of the others. Oc is always a gamble.
post #117 of 180
Thread Starter 
ah ok, thanks.


you can change the cooler on the gx2 and gtx?
http://www.tweaktown.com/news/9264/g...ves/index.html
GX2 & GTX aftermarket cooling arrives

Published: 3rd April 2008 @ 7:06 AM
Author: Steve Dougherty
post #118 of 180
FYI: changed over to 4AA and fraps report is

2008-04-04 20:19:55 - iw3mp
Frames: 13213 - Time: 181406ms - Avg: 72.837 - Min: 20 - Max: 94
post #119 of 180


http://en.expreview.com/2008/04/03/g...gtx-review/12/

What another waste. Nvidia sure does love to rehash G92.
post #120 of 180
Wow that is owned
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