The NVIDIA 6800 GS Closer Look: EVGA, Leadtek, PNY, and Evertop
by Josh Venning on January 27, 2006 8:53 AM EST- Posted in
- GPUs
Battlefield 2 Performance
We tested Battlefield 2 with the 1.03 patch and our own custom demo. The demo makes use of multiple vehicles and is very heavy on the GPU. Our tests were performed with all the settings on high and 4xAA enabled.
The good news is that it is almost playable at 1600x1200 with 4xAA enabled. Performance of the stock speed 6800 GS (same as the Evertop out-of-box speed) is much better than that of the X800 GTO without any overclocking or unlocking done to it. This game performs very nicely at 1280x1024 and is more than playable at 1600x1200 without AA enabled.
We tested Battlefield 2 with the 1.03 patch and our own custom demo. The demo makes use of multiple vehicles and is very heavy on the GPU. Our tests were performed with all the settings on high and 4xAA enabled.
The good news is that it is almost playable at 1600x1200 with 4xAA enabled. Performance of the stock speed 6800 GS (same as the Evertop out-of-box speed) is much better than that of the X800 GTO without any overclocking or unlocking done to it. This game performs very nicely at 1280x1024 and is more than playable at 1600x1200 without AA enabled.
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bob661 - Friday, January 27, 2006 - link
....because AGP is dead. No need to mention it. LOL!JamesDax - Friday, January 27, 2006 - link
Gotta wonder why Nvidia and ATI are still releasing AGP cards then. Boggles the mind.DerekWilson - Friday, January 27, 2006 - link
Going forward, our focus will be on PCIe.But we could still have one or two things up our sleeves for those still working with AGP, so don't loose heart.
;-)
kmmatney - Friday, January 27, 2006 - link
Isn't AGP performance about the same?grizzly7 - Monday, January 30, 2006 - link
The AGP versions of 6800GS only have a core clock of 350MHz, so performance is worse.CuriousMike - Friday, January 27, 2006 - link
Honestly, this article did nothing but say, "Zalman makes a superior cooler."Better overclock, better cooling, and more quiet.
They're all ~ the same reference design (maybe different memory.)
Puddleglum - Friday, January 27, 2006 - link
Searched Newegg and found 4 eVGA 6800GS cards, and each one has different core clock speeds and memory speeds. http://www.newegg.com/Product/ProductCompare.asp?C...">Newegg search resultsIn the results, none of the cards are clocked at 450MHz/1.05GHz, and the fact that one of them comes factory set at 490MHz/1.1GHz makes me wonder if it can exceed the 510MHz/1.15GHz of your test card. An honest defense for eVGA regarding its nominal performance in this review is that you simply didn't use the right card.
DerekWilson - Friday, January 27, 2006 - link
Stock speeds are actually 425/1.0Meaning the EVGA is overclocked. They may have a more uber model out there, but this is the one they sent us when we mentioned this roundup to them.
From our experience with these cards, it seems like it would be difficult getting a 6800GS clocked higher than ~525 ... The EverTop card stayed cooler than the rest of them, so heat didn't really become a factor in preventing higher clock speeds. I just think the chip has the juice to get much faster than that.
Killrose - Friday, January 27, 2006 - link
Nice article, but the ATi X800GTO is well below the $200 price point. Forget Price Watch even, Newegg has some at the $130 mark and the 6800GS start at $189kmmatney - Friday, January 27, 2006 - link
Would have liked to have seen a X800GTO2 in there, as well as a 7800GT. The X800GTO2 can be had for $189, and unlocking the extra 4 pipes is easy and only has to be done once, ever. Out of the box, the 6800GS looks like a better deal, but the X800GTO2 gains more with overclocking/unlocking.