Best Graphics Card for SU/Photoshop?
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Maybe upgrade to one of the Nvidia 768mb cards. Im sure the extra memory will help with SU.
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mmm 700 meg.... how much though?
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Generally I'd say get the best GFX card you can afford. AFAIK neither SU / Photoshop benefits from having workstation cards (nVidia brand Quadro series or ATi/AMD brand FireGL series). There are some apps that do benefit (obviously), one of which would be 3DS Max for instance.
The more memory the better, the faster/stronger the GPU the better. I don't know how much benefit will be achieved with the new generation nVidia GeForce 8-series DX10 (DX10 only available under MS Vista) cards, depends on the size of the models you work on though.
The new generation GFX cards from nVidia and ATi/AMD packs a mighty punch, but they are costly and require a lot of power from the PSU which also translates into heat issues.
I don't know if the nVidia cars are in fact better than the ATi/AMD ones for use in SU, I've never had any problems with ATi cards and generally their picture quality is better than the nVidia cards (but you'll have to look pretty close to notice the difference).
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Thanks for the tips. I took everyone suggestions and decided to do a search on Best Buy to see what comes up and here is what I found:
I'm looking at the top 3...the top 2 being water cooled. I think the water cooled cards would be a big plus minimizing heat and all 3 are 768MB. Other than hooking up a water cooling system, they don't seem to have any other special requirements that would limit me in what I already have. As far as I know, I aleady have the 500W power supply, if not, that's an easy and probably necessary upgrade anyway.
I wish I were a little more hardware savvy, but fortunately I get most of the tech stuff. So if anyone wants to take a look at those cards and recommend something, or something else, I'm still open to ideas. I'm meeting with the IT guy later this afternoon so I still have some time to decide.
Thanks again everyone.
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Out of the new DX10 8-series cards from nVidia it has been shown (benchmarking using various apps / games) that the more RAM on the GFX card only really start to show its worth if you're running high resolutions (1600 x 1200 and up IIRC), I don't know if it holds true for SU / PS as well.
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I'm thinking of trying this one out on my overclocked E4300
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.asp?item=N82E16814122023
256MB GeForce 8500GT 128-bit GDDR2 PCI Express x16
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I think I read that these later 768mb cards are requiring pretty big power supplies (600 +)
Another thing was that they tend to be a little larger, especially in length and some cases will not take them.Dylan
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Yeah Dylan, they get pretty big and indeed they might not fit some chassis designs, true also they need some serious power, but it really depends on how many other components you have and what their power requirements are. A good way to check is to use a power calculator (instead of just guessing) one of which can be found by following the power calculator links from this address: http://www.extreme.outervision.com/index.jsp
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ok I broke down and got an Nvidia Verto 8500GT 512 Meg...
will report...
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Kris,
How is the Nvidia Verto 8500GT 512 Meg. going?
I'm probably not too far from getting a new machine and while most of your technical talk goes over my head I was thinking that a 512Mb card was a bit excessive. I dont think Oz is too far behind when it comes to things like this but its very hard to find configurations for sale with 512 cards.
And then I read http://sketchup.google.com/support/bin/answer.py?answer=36208
It seems that Google are recommending a 512Mb card as optimal!Just how common are they at the top end of the world?
And just how much of an improvement are they?......at the moment I'm using a 128 FX 5200
Stu
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the 512 8500 GT is awesome... I have some glitching in my large developments but mostly it handles it...
the crowd test runs seamlessly... I love my new card... $149 at bestbuy...
all my other prgrams are running very well too...
so far I love it...
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I have been working day and night on a very large project lately and told my boss I just needed a new machine. I mentioned the one I have would be great as a secondary machine just for running renderings and animations, while a new one for upgrading.
I'll be looking into specs this week with our IT guy and let you guys know what I'm thinking at getting. Feedback would be greatly appreciated.
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have a look at my E4300 overclocked build here in the hardware forum
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This is my first post here. I'm not yet a SU user but I'm building a system that I intend to use for SU:
ASUS A8V Deluxe (non-PCI)
Athlon X2 4200+
2GB DDR400
WinXPAs for my graphics card, I'm limited to AGP. I'm between the HIS X1950 Pro (512MB) and the XFX 7900 GS (256MB). I can't seem to find a 512MB version of the 7900 GS. Both cards are roughly $150 with rebates.
There aren't but a handful of AGP cards more powerful than these two, for example, the 7950 GT. I read today that NVidia has developed a AGP/PCI bridge for the GeForce 8 series and that an AGP version of the 8600 is just around the corner
Back to reality...
I'm thinking I should go with the X1950 PRO simply because it has 512MB. But I read elsewhere here that Nvidia based cards are best for SU. Perhaps this is no longer the case??Advice would be appreciated.
David[ginahoy]
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