by congo » Wed Jun 15, 2005 12:10 am
Luke,
While our respective hardware is somewhat different, we do share a similar domestic situation. In light of that fact, may I recommend a couple of alternatives?
You will, (or at least should), see a dramatic improvement in performance due to a video upgrade, but alas, we also share a common conundrum........ to upgrade our video cards with financial prudence.
I could advise you to look at a cheaper high end "socket A" chipset/CPU future upgrade, this will provide reasonable support for your intended video card.
However, it's really not a good idea, because soon, and for just a few pesos more, you should be able to get into a 64bit socket 939 system. I saw in your other post that you are interested in a 64bit upgrade eventually.
In light of this, buying an AGP based G card is really not the best move unless you plan on sticking with your present rig for a year or two.
The reason I say this is because the better 64 bit upgrade options, (and soon to be affordable), will preclude AGP Graphics cards, and you will need a PCIe based G Card. AGP support is not found on the better 64bit mainboards, and this makes our upgrade a very expensive proposition, as it means that we need:
64bit mainboard (current choice is a no brainer - nForce4 ultra or SLI on socket 939)
Socket 939 64bit CPU (a venice cored 3200+ minimum with a view to overclocking should suffice)
Some good quality and overspec RAM (2 x 512mb PC4200, (500mhz), Kingston modules are fairly cheap)
A decent PCIe G Card (the 6600GT's are always cheaper in the PCIe version than the AGP equivalent)
Anyway, it's food for thought, and saving up for that lot is gonna be a challenge, but it will be worth it in the end, and you'll be set for a while with some decent modern hardware.

Mainboard: Asus P5K-Premium, CPU=Intel E6850 @ x8x450fsb 3.6ghz, RAM: 4gb PC8500 Team Dark, Video: NV8800GT, HDD: 2x1Tb Samsung F3 RAID-0 + 1Tb F3, PSU: Antec 550 Basiq, OS: Win7x64, Display: 24&