ive been looking around newegg and tigerdirect and all of the net for that matter....just cant seem to find many agp 4x/8x cards anymore ...i remember just couple months ago they were easy to find now i dont know ...any1 have clue where to find them ?
Well, http://www.newegg.com/Product/ProductLi … GP+4X%2f8X
If you'd like us to help pick one, list your current specs!
If you'd like us to help pick one, list your current specs!
main battle tank karthus medikopter 117 megamegapowershot gg
Fastest from the line-up is the 2600XT
i dont know much bout radeon's but u say that the 2600xt is the best .... ill be on a 2.4 with gig of ram which i think i might up to 2 gig or 4 not decided... what setting could i have bf2 on with that card?
Last edited by Gfr28 (2008-02-23 10:01:50)
Trust me on this one
High without a problem.
High without a problem.
Last edited by _NL_Lt.EngineerFox (2008-02-23 10:02:39)
k thanks for the help i appreciate it
anyone else dispute this? lol or did _NL hit it out of the park of the first go around
You are better off getting a pci-e slot motherboard and buying a 7600gt. They are cheaper than dirt cheap now. All of that together would be about 110-140$.
well if i do that id have to switch over my processor because with my processor i cant get a pci board
which 2600xt theres bout 3 of them_NL_Lt.EngineerFox wrote:
Fastest from the line-up is the 2600XT
Doesn't really matter tbh
What does 4x/8x mean?
Same idea as PCI-e 16 if you are familair with that, think am right in saying it is refering to the lanes.Funky_Finny wrote:
What does 4x/8x mean?
Imo, if your going with a AGP card,
My vote goes to the X1950 pro. Although, I don't know if you will find one very easily, that or the 7900GT. A dx10 AGP card is useless imo.
Martyn
Last edited by Bell (2008-02-23 13:07:02)
AGP 2x is about twice as fast as AGP 1x, AGP 4x is about teice as fast as AGP 2x, and so on.Funky_Finny wrote:
What does 4x/8x mean?
The idea of any hi-fi system is to reproduce the source material as faithfully as possible, and to deliberately add distortion to everything you hear (due to amplifier deficiencies) because it sounds 'nice' is simply not high fidelity. If that is what you want to hear then there is no problem with that, but by adding so much additional material (by way of harmonics and intermodulation) you have a tailored sound system, not a hi-fi. - Rod Elliot, ESP