RLT65
05-03-2001, 07:09 PM
I would like to know what cpu speed, ram speed & what width (64bit 128bit etc) the ATI radeon, gforce ultra, gforce2 & MX run at. Any one know or sites with all this info?
Thanks
Thanks
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Click to See Complete Forum and Search --> : Technical video card question RLT65 05-03-2001, 07:09 PM I would like to know what cpu speed, ram speed & what width (64bit 128bit etc) the ATI radeon, gforce ultra, gforce2 & MX run at. Any one know or sites with all this info? Thanks Hellmund 05-04-2001, 07:54 AM First of all it's GPU(graphic processing unit) not CPU. All the cards are 128bit, except the MX can be either except when it uses DDR RAM which forces it to be 64bit. Geforce2 MX = 175/166 Geforce2 GTS = 200/166 DDR or SDR Geforce2 PRO = 200/200 DDR or SDR Geforce2 Ultra = 250/230 DDR I'll post the Radeon when I confirm it in 5minutes. In the case of DDR just double the second part it's in form core/memory. Hellmund 05-04-2001, 08:02 AM All the oem versions of Radeon are 166/166 but the retail versions are 183/183. Bob The Great 05-04-2001, 11:29 PM Actually I believe the company e.g. Creative Labs, ELSA ect... set the card to whatever speed they want. So ELSA might use better memory, and a better fan, and speed it up a bit. NVidia does have suggested levels though. Wich are probably what Hellmud was talking about. Any specific card you want the speed for? NDC 05-05-2001, 12:04 AM Yep, all manufacturers have different memory speed for there NVidia based cards. The standard may be 200/166 for the GTS, but some manufacturers such as Suma, Garnet, Elsa, etc have faster memory on them. The Suma GTS comes with either a 200/166, 200/183, and 200/200 DDR memory... Most companies would call the 200/200 a GTS Pro... But not in Suma's case..... Hellmund 05-05-2001, 07:10 AM Yeh those are the NVIDIA standards. Most manfacturers soop'em up a little so they look better in comparison, you don't see too many benchmark graphs with the clock speeds so some people just assume the boards better when it's just o/ced a little. RLT65 05-05-2001, 06:44 PM Thanks for all the input! SysOpt.com
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