I want a video card. What should I buy
#1
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I want a video card. What should I buy
I have this oldish desktop. I hardly use it. Its about 4 years old. I do occasionally play even older video games. I recently got my hands on an old copy of microsoft flight simulator X and have been playing that. Trouble is if I crank up the video settings it slows down a fair bit and I get alot of pop up in the scenery.
I upgraded the RAM on this computer a couple of months ago and couldn't believe how cheap this has become. I only added a pair of 2gb chips but that was upgrading from 1gb total. Think I paid a little over £20 for it, New.
Working on the assumption that I am trying to play a 6 year old game on a 4 year old machine I presume a video card upgrade can be done for not much money as well? Sort of upgrade it to what was cutting edge 5 years ago?
I know nothing about this. RAM upgrades and ethernet cards are all I have ever done inside a PC so school me. Its a Dell Inspiron 530 with a 2gb processer.
I upgraded the RAM on this computer a couple of months ago and couldn't believe how cheap this has become. I only added a pair of 2gb chips but that was upgrading from 1gb total. Think I paid a little over £20 for it, New.
Working on the assumption that I am trying to play a 6 year old game on a 4 year old machine I presume a video card upgrade can be done for not much money as well? Sort of upgrade it to what was cutting edge 5 years ago?
I know nothing about this. RAM upgrades and ethernet cards are all I have ever done inside a PC so school me. Its a Dell Inspiron 530 with a 2gb processer.
Last edited by Blaize; 09-19-2011 at 07:09 PM.
#2
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Your computer has one PCI express x16 connector, at the 1.0A standard. The currently-popular standards are 2.0 and 2.1, however most (but not all) cards build to this standard will be backwards-compatible with 1.0A. The key specification to look for is PCI express x16.
That said, just about any video card available today will work in this PC. How fancy you want to get here depends mostly on how much you want to spend. Different folks have different favorite chipsets, though I expect that just about anything in the ~£50 range would get you where you need to be.
#3
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I'd recommend:
$50-$75 range: http://www.newegg.com/Product/Produc...82E16814130609
$75-$100 range: http://www.newegg.com/Product/Produc...82E16814121442
$100-$200 range: http://www.newegg.com/Product/Produc...82E16814130566
I've actually got the gtx 460 myself, the fermi chips are a good bump in performance vs the older. Don't need to buy the superclocked versions, you can overclock it yourself with free software.
$50-$75 range: http://www.newegg.com/Product/Produc...82E16814130609
$75-$100 range: http://www.newegg.com/Product/Produc...82E16814121442
$100-$200 range: http://www.newegg.com/Product/Produc...82E16814130566
I've actually got the gtx 460 myself, the fermi chips are a good bump in performance vs the older. Don't need to buy the superclocked versions, you can overclock it yourself with free software.
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Does it have a PCI-E slot?
If it doesnt I wouldnt even bother with it.
If it does I would look for a good used card, like perhaps an 8800 GT
No reason to get a good new GPU with an old rig like that.
If it doesnt I wouldnt even bother with it.
If it does I would look for a good used card, like perhaps an 8800 GT
No reason to get a good new GPU with an old rig like that.
#7
I have a 8800 GTS 320MB I could sell you in a few days when my new card gets here. Being in the UK, though, it's probably not worth the shipping.
Any of the cards flier posted should work. Personally, I'd get the newest card you can afford, that way you're not in the same predicament if a cool game you wanna play comes out later this year.
Any of the cards flier posted should work. Personally, I'd get the newest card you can afford, that way you're not in the same predicament if a cool game you wanna play comes out later this year.
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Originally Posted by Blaize
Its a Dell Inspiron 530
#11
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Perez you are the person I was expecting to answer this and it sounds like you seem to understand what I am looking for so I will go off searching for one.
While I can appreciate that some of you are suggesting I get the best I can afford, I am much happier to spend £50 and get "pretty good" rather than blow £200 on "the best". As I say I don't do much gaming on this thing, and what I do is always a few years out of date (that way they have all been reviewed to death and all the patches are done, so I know what to buy, and it works when I do). Not to mention, a bit of googling on the subject leads me to beleive that I would have to upgrade the Power supply as well to run a completely modern card and I have no interest in going that far.
Thanks for all the input though
While I can appreciate that some of you are suggesting I get the best I can afford, I am much happier to spend £50 and get "pretty good" rather than blow £200 on "the best". As I say I don't do much gaming on this thing, and what I do is always a few years out of date (that way they have all been reviewed to death and all the patches are done, so I know what to buy, and it works when I do). Not to mention, a bit of googling on the subject leads me to beleive that I would have to upgrade the Power supply as well to run a completely modern card and I have no interest in going that far.
Thanks for all the input though
#12
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However, bus standards are pretty easy, and we're fortunate in that things have been relatively stable for the past many years. Once PCIe x16 displaced AGP and became the de-facto universal standard for video cards, that was pretty much the end of incompatibility.
So, long story short, pretty much any PCIe x16 card will work in your system, and you can safely assume that performance will increase as a function of £.
As an aside, do you know how annoying it is to type £ on a US keyboard? We don't have that character available. You have to hold down the Alt key and then type 0163 on the keypad. I'd like to propose that the UK (and the EU, for that matter) adopt one of the following symbols to represent their currency: ^ * # % & (those are the ones we can type easily and which aren't already in use.)
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I've just done something similar on my Dell E521.
Bought a ~£50 gfx card and it's allowed my to play some of the latest games again. Not at full res/effects, but perfectly reasonably.
Was a nice shot in the arm for the PC
Bought a ~£50 gfx card and it's allowed my to play some of the latest games again. Not at full res/effects, but perfectly reasonably.
Was a nice shot in the arm for the PC
#14
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UK keyboards come with both $ and £. But I am an American and brought a couple of laptops over with me so I feel you pain. In fact I didn't even think to find out how to do it with the wrong keyboard and just type out the word Pounds.
Given what it takes to get the symbol, I think I will stick with my method.
Given what it takes to get the symbol, I think I will stick with my method.
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