Video Card Question
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@sketch3d.de said:
@joe wood said:
'how to replace video card'
uninstall the ATI driver (see above), replace card (do ground yourself before touching), install the latest AMD Catalyst driver (see above), done.
Norbert
+1, it really is that easy. Good luck Joe. I have one similar to that in my laptop and I am unimpressed but other factors may be involved.
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...just to be clear, i didn't mean you should get a HD4350 which is one of the weakest cards from this series - much slower than a 4670!
http://www.tomshardware.com/charts/gaming-graphics-cards-charts-2009-q3-mainstream-quality-update-2/compare,1572.html?prod%5B2905%5D=on&prod%5B2900%5D=on&prod%5B2911%5D=on
I only wanted to show you that there are still cards available from this series. -
OK I can return it, so I should order this one? the GeForce GTX 650?
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16814130827&nm_mc=KNC-GoogleAdwords&cm_mmc=KNC-GoogleAdwords--pla--Desktop+Graphics+Cards-_-N82E16814130827&gclid=CNWouufty7oCFQE6Qgod528AfgI don't do much intensive modeling, and never do any rendering.
will I still need that extra power connector with this card? The white ones with a 4 pin connection.
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@joe wood said:
OK I can return it, so I should order this one? the GeForce GTX 650?
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16814130827&nm_mc=KNC-GoogleAdwords&cm_mmc=KNC-GoogleAdwords--pla--Desktop+Graphics+Cards-_-N82E16814130827&gclid=CNWouufty7oCFQE6Qgod528AfgI don't do much intensive modeling, and never do any rendering.
will I still need that extra power connector with this card? The white ones with a 4 pin connection.
Definitely a better card and Nvidia
What is your current PSU?
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I don't know Solo, I even had to google PSU :-)Can I look it up in my computer specs somewhere?
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@joe wood said:
I don't know Solo, I even had to google PSU Can I look it up in my computer specs somewhere?
There should be a sticker on it, I do not know of anywhere one can check in windows however.
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yeah I can see a sticker up under the case but I can't read it unless I take it out.
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no numer, I only want the card, sorry, I don't know anything about replacing video cards or what to buy. I'm feeling pretty ignorant now.
Solo, I've been googling what psu a dell dimension 4600 has, some are 250 watt and some 400 .. I downloaded the 4600 owners and service manuals, is it in there? Sorry I don't see it listed.
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The GTX650 not available as AGP card. The latest AGP cards are some Radeon HD4xxx and GeForce 7xxx. Or do you plan to buy a new board now?
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@joe wood said:
Can I look it up in my computer specs somewhere?
IF it is a Dell computer, (I think you mentioned it is).....find the "service tag #" on the exterior of the case.
It would be on a small decal about the size of a return address on a USPS envelope.Then, simply go to the Dell site.....support....service tag#....enter sevice tag #....viola...all or most specs. should still be available specific to your build.
Charlie
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OK, it has a 250 watt psu.
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"AGP" and "PCI Express" are the type of connectors. AGP is outdated since several years. A PCIe card would simply not fit into your computer.
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no I haven't Glen, I'd need to remove it to see the sticker on the bottom. Too many connected wires has me intimidated!
I did google some numbers on the side of the psu
cn 0f0340-47890-353-2067
and found this
http://www.memory4less.com/m4l_itemdetail.aspx?itemid=1442482616&partno=0F0340&rid=88&gclid=CJWs-YDGzroCFUlyQgod8FQAIw -
I asked this video card question at the Dell forum, and someone suggested this
"Money would be better spent finding a GX620 with Pentium D.
The 4600 is DDR with AGP.
The GX620 uses DDR2 and has PCI-E video and with Pentium D would be many times faster in all aspects and would have many video options that could be re used later in a newer better faster machine."
http://www.amazon.com/gp/offer-listing/B004VFJRLI/ref=dp_olp_used?ie=UTF8&condition=used
what am I looking at on that page? Isn't that tower the whole computer? For $83? That's right around what I was thinking of paying for the video card alone.
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You know Joe, getting a newer, used PC is not a bad idea. Here is a local CL add in your area that has 2 of those for $90 each.
http://sandiego.craigslist.org/csd/sys/4170748294.html
They are older but they do use PCIe video cards (the newer ones) and they are dual core, 64-bit cpus which will be far and away better than your P4 based system. I really would not spend any money on that old system. I had one just like it and while it was a good PC for the 6 years I had it just got to a point where it was not worth upgrading it.
Search around a bit on CL and fins one local, this way you can maybe see it run and check it's condition before you buy.
Good luck -
Boy I don't know, then I'd have to transfer everything on this computer over onto the newer one and I've never done anything like that before. Is it that difficult?
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@joe wood said:
Boy I don't know, then I'd have to transfer everything on this computer over onto the newer one and I've never done anything like that before. Is it that difficult?
Yeah you'd basically have to reinstall all applications and then transfer all files as well. That is the worst part of getting a new PC. It can be a pain but it's worth it when you get better hardware.
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@glenn at home said:
That is the worst part of getting a new PC. It can be a pain but it's worth it when you get better hardware.
because of this investing in a new, capable PC which will last some time is probably a better choice then investing in some ol' stuff... desktops are cheap these times, this one w/ the GTX from above and SU will fly.
Norbert
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@joe wood said:
Boy I don't know, then I'd have to transfer everything on this computer over onto the newer one and I've never done anything like that before. Is it that difficult?
Actually setting up a new machine is therapeutic, especially if you get one with a larger HDD or multiple HDD's, you get a clean fast uncluttered machine to start with, you can organize the install as you please, put stuff in the right places, only load what you need resulting in a slick fast 3D machine.
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