The GeForce FX 5700 Ultra

As we have mentioned, the GeForce FX 5700 Ultra is based on the NV36 GPU. The core speed of the GPU on the eVGA card we tested was 475MHz. With 128MBs of DDR2 RAM running at 450MHz (900 MHz effective data rate), there is plenty of bandwidth to be had from this solution. As far as cooling goes, we can take a look at a typical 5700 Ultra board layout to see what we can expect:

The heatsink fan combo is fairly low profile, and this card will fit into an AGP slot without disturbing the neighboring PCI slot. Of course, we recommend leaving that slot open anyway, but its nice to have the option to use it if you need it. Though its not visible in this image, there is a heatsink on the back as well.

As far as the GeForce FX 5700 non-ultra version, we expect the clocks to hover somewhere around 425 core, 275 (550 effective) memory. NVIDIA has informed us that they are leaving these timings up to the OEMs, so we may see some variation in the playing field.

For testing our GeForce FX 5700 Ultra, we used the exact same setup as in our previous 9600XT review.

Now on to the architecture…

Index Architecture
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  • Anonymous User - Thursday, October 23, 2003 - link

    it seems toms review puts into question ati's optimizations moreso than nvidia's image quality
  • Anonymous User - Thursday, October 23, 2003 - link

    In any case,.....it's another round of new card releases and hopefully cheaper prices around for the
    "older" models.
  • Anonymous User - Thursday, October 23, 2003 - link

    #19, I don't think it is a fanboy thing. It's an AT thing that's costing them their respect from other hardware sites and readers.
  • Anonymous User - Thursday, October 23, 2003 - link

    ati fanboys above dont look to happy :)
  • Anonymous User - Thursday, October 23, 2003 - link

    # 15, If someone writes a crappy review then he deserves all the problems and flak the come with it.
  • gordon151 - Thursday, October 23, 2003 - link

    #14, "The GeForce FX 5700 Ultra will be debuting at $199 after a mail in rebate. If $200 is your hard limit, and you need a midrange card right now, the 5700 Ultra is the way to go if you want ****solid frame rates****." Now you could say they dodged the image quality bullet on that comment, but that's really the only recommendation they made on the 5700 Ultra.

    When the new article comes out and they do an image quality analysis, if their findings are similar to that of HardOCP and TomsHardware the conclusion will be something similar to "5700 Ultra still for solid frame rates and 9600 XT for solid frame rates *AND* image quality".

    BTW Derek I don't believe was even at the press event, that was Anand. Derek is the sole author of this article it seems and unlike Toms and HardOCP he didn't have any direct aide from other staff.
  • Anonymous User - Thursday, October 23, 2003 - link

    #13,

    No, we don't need to bitch at every AT review. But when the conclusion CONTRADICTS the very data he supplies us, then something is seriously wrong. Wouldn't you say?
  • Anonymous User - Thursday, October 23, 2003 - link

    #14, if anyone buys an expensive video card based on 1 review from 1 tech site, they deserve the problems that could come with it.
  • Anonymous User - Thursday, October 23, 2003 - link

    The review crowned a new midrange segment winner without dealing with image quality. What are they going to do, retract that later after their image tests? What about the people that bought the cards based on their review - and then they find out the cards have image quality problems?

    Other sites in the past when they discovered issues waited until they had done further testing before coming out with any review. Perhaps anandtech should have followed hardocp's lead, and instead of partying it up and brown-nosing at nvidia press events they should have been doing their image tests so they could put out a full review.
  • gordon151 - Thursday, October 23, 2003 - link

    Do we seriously need the comments crying for the authors head with *EVERY* review? They already said they were working on an article which will do a study on the image quality tests and will be posted laters. This review will clearly stress the numbers and that's where they draw conclusions. Damn, give them a frigging break.

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