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#1 | |
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Registered User
Join Date: Dec 2006
Location: Hereford, UK
Posts: 273
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I'm curious what you guys think on factory overclocked cards, are they less reliable? Are they better overclockers overall? Is the increased power drain a big issue?
The reason i ask is that i'm going to buy a GTX260 next week but I can't decide between: The XFX Black edition 216: http://www.scan.co.uk/Products/896MB...V-plus-FarCry2 Or the EVGA Standard 216: http://www.scan.co.uk/Products/896MB...ink-DVI-I-HDTV They're both the same price, but because the only card i've ever had a problem with (see link here) was an OC'ed BFG i'm slightly hesitant to go for the XFX (Who i've heard have pretty bad support). Also I quite like the idea of step-up but I doubt the new GTX260 in Jan' will be that much better, so it's probably not that relevant. Also, i'll be getting a Corsair TX650 to power it, that should be ok right? ![]()
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Core2Quad Q9550 ASUS Commando 4GB Kingston HyperX PC2 8500 EVGA GTX 260 216 Intel X25M G2 160GB SSD X-Fi Xtreme Music Corsair TX 650 Samsung SM226BW |
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#2 | |
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we have had many discussions here on this topic, and some of them have not ended well
![]() basically, what factory overclocks does is its sort of a guarantee that the card will and is running at above stock speed 100% stable. This brings us to the question : Is it worth paying more for something that you can do yourself? To some it is, because they prefer to mess with the card as little as possible, and would rather have a solid unit. Others, buy the stock card and mess with it themselves. This does have some risk involved, but you save the money. Since they are the same price, i would go for the factory overclocked version. Usually the differences are not huge (3-5fps), but i would go for the faster inna heartbeat. |
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#3 |
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Registered User
Join Date: Dec 2006
Location: Hereford, UK
Posts: 273
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Yeah I did think that but i've since read a lot of stuff about how appalling XFX support is and since I had the issue with the GTX280 I bought, that's quite a big issue.
I will admit I forgot to search for it before I posted, but what's the general consensus on overclocking, presumably the factory oc'ed ones are better quality in order to guarantee higher clocks?
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Core2Quad Q9550 ASUS Commando 4GB Kingston HyperX PC2 8500 EVGA GTX 260 216 Intel X25M G2 160GB SSD X-Fi Xtreme Music Corsair TX 650 Samsung SM226BW |
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#4 | |
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Mahna Mahna
Join Date: Jul 2006
Location: Madison, Wi
Posts: 6,123
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I've never had a problem buying a vanilla version of a card and then overclocking it to the speeds of the more expensive cards. Why pay more for something that takes all of about 5 seconds to do yourself?
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#5 |
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#6 | |
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It's a wittle baby!
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I'd get the EVGA card and overclock it yourself.
BTW, EVGA's service and support is fantastic! ![]()
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#7 |
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Registered User
Join Date: May 2003
Location: Larnaca, Cyprus
Posts: 4,152
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I'd say bad. Sometimes the QA on them is not good enough, they will fail and cause you trouble, costing you even more money to RMA them...
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#8 |
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Registered User
Join Date: Oct 2005
Posts: 173
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from my experience they are not a good idea after my troubles with a bfg oc 280 gtx first of all in sli mode it would freeze coming outa of crysis and crysis warhead then on its own it would refuse to even post thank god its RMA,ED to bfg.just gonna sell it when i get it back
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#9 |
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Registered User
Join Date: Dec 2006
Location: Hereford, UK
Posts: 273
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Yeah that's pretty much what I thought, EVGA it is!
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#10 |
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8^9^3
Join Date: Oct 2003
Location: Old Vizima
Posts: 3,679
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I'd echo others here. Buy a card from Evga since they support end user overclocking and HSF replacement under their lifetime warranty. I wouldn't bother with factory OCed cards. Many stock GTX 260s will do 660 on the core with the fan on auto and can do well above that with 70-75% manually set. I'd expect 680 or greater in that scenario. When you find your max shader clock you can always unlink it from the core and raise the core until it maxes. I did just that.
In some scenarios overclocking is pointless. It can often be very meaningful @ 1920x with AA when considering min frame rates.
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#11 |
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Registered User
Join Date: Dec 2006
Location: Hereford, UK
Posts: 273
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Sounds good, I usually set the fan to 95% in Rivatuner anyway so I should be able to overclock a fair bit.
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#12 |
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Join Date: Jul 2002
Location: GREENVILLE,TX
Posts: 3,851
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Since what you are looking at are the same price I would go with the overclocked one ,But Evga has lot better customer support.Most of the time a factory overclock card will overclock farther then a stock version ,but not always ,and it is useally not by very much.I would get the cheapest GTX 260's and just overclock them ,most of the time you can save a lot of money and put it toward something else.
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