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GIGABYTE Radeon RX 6600 Eagle 8G Graphics Card

GIGABYTE Radeon RX 6600 Eagle 8G Graphics Card
GIGABYTE Radeon RX 6600 Eagle 8G Graphics Card
GIGABYTE Radeon RX 6600 Eagle 8G Graphics Card
GIGABYTE Radeon RX 6600 Eagle 8G Graphics Card
GIGABYTE Radeon RX 6600 Eagle 8G Graphics Card
GIGABYTE Radeon RX 6600 Eagle 8G Graphics Card
Out Of Stock
GIGABYTE Radeon RX 6600 Eagle 8G Graphics Card
GIGABYTE Radeon RX 6600 Eagle 8G Graphics Card
GIGABYTE Radeon RX 6600 Eagle 8G Graphics Card
GIGABYTE Radeon RX 6600 Eagle 8G Graphics Card
GIGABYTE Radeon RX 6600 Eagle 8G Graphics Card
GIGABYTE Radeon RX 6600 Eagle 8G Graphics Card
GIGABYTE Radeon RX 6600 Eagle 8G Graphics Card
  • Stock: Out Of Stock
  • Model: Model-80106
* অনলাইনে প্রোডাক্ট অর্ডারের পূর্বে হেল্পলাইন থেকে স্টক এবং ডেলিভারী সর্ম্পকে সঠিকভাবে জেনে অর্ডার করার জন্য বিশেষভাবে অনুরোধ করা যাচ্ছে *
  • Key Feature

    • Memory Size: 8 GB
    • Memory Type: GDDR6
    • Memory Bandwidth (GB/Sec): 224 GB/S
    • Memory Clock: 14000 MHz
    • Stream Processors: 1792

GIGABYTE Radeon RX 6600 Eagle 8G Graphics Card

Based On The RDNA 2 Architecture And Designed To Handle The Graphical Demands Of 1080p Gaming, The Gigabyte Radeon RX 6600 EAGLE Graphics Card Provides An Immersive Gaming Experience With Your PC Games. The GPU Features 8GB Of GDDR6 VRAM And A 128-Bit Memory Interface, Offering Improved Performance And Power Efficiency Over The Previous RDNA-Based Generation.Radeon RX 6600 Eagle Front Panel Of The Card Features A Variety Of Outputs, Such As DisplayPort 1.4 And HDMI 2.1. HDMI 2.1 Supports Up To 48 Gb/S Bandwidth And A Range Of Higher Resolutions And Refresh Rates, Including 8K @ 60 Fps, 4K @ 120 Fps, And Even Up To 10K. The Radeon RX 6600 Supports APIs Such As DirectX 12 Ultimate And OpenGL. These APIs Can Take Advantage Of The GPU's 1792 Stream Processors To Accelerate Parallel Computing Tasks, Taking Some Of The Processing Load Off Of The CPU.For Cooling, Gigabyte Implemented The WINDFORCE 3X Cooling System. Radeon RX 6600 Eagle Cooling System Uses Three 80mm Fans. The Airflow Is Split By The Triangle Fan Edge And Guided Smoothly Through The 3D Stripe Curve On The Fan Surface. The 3D Active Fan Feature Provides Semi-Passive Cooling, Which Means The Fans Will Remain Off When The GPU Is Under A Set Loading Or Temperature For Low Power Gaming.DirectX 12 UltimateDirectX 12 Ultimate Gives Game Developers The Power To Deliver Immersive Visuals With Real-Time DirectX Raytracing (DXR), Variable Rate Shading (VRS), Mesh Shaders, And Sampler Feedback, Taking Games To The Next Level.AMD FidelityFXAMD FidelityFX Is An Open-Source Image-Quality Toolkit Comprising Seven Different Solutions Available For Game Developers To Implement Into Their Games That Are Optimized For AMD RDNA And RDNA 2 Architectures.AMD Radeon Image SharpeningRestores Clarity To In-Game Images That Have Been Softened By Other Post-Process Effects. RIS Combines With GPU Upscaling To Provide Sharp Visuals At Fluid Frame Rates On Very High-Resolution Displays, And Works Across DirectX 9, 12, And Vulkan Titles.AMD FreeSync 2 TechnologyReduce Screen Tearing With AMD's FreeSync 2 Technology. FreeSync 2 Enables The Monitor To Dynamically Adjust Its Refresh Rate To The Frame Rate Being Output By The Graphics Card, Thereby Greatly Reducing Screen Tearing, Stuttering, And Other Artifacts.Radeon Anti-LagOptimized For ESports, Radeon Anti-Lag Improves Competitiveness By Decreasing Input-To-Display Response Times By Up To 31 Percent, Delivering An Experience Similar To Higher Frame Rates.AMD Radeon BoostAMD Radeon Boost Dynamically Lowers Resolution Of The Entire Frame When Fast On-Screen Character Motion Is Detected Via User Input, Allowing For Higher FPS With Little Impact To Quality.

GIGABYTE Radeon RX 6600 Eagle 8G Review

We have with us the Gigabyte Radeon RX 6600 Eagle, a premium custom-design graphics card based on AMD's latest mid-range GPU. The RX 6600 (non-XT) is designed for 1080p gaming with maximum settings, and meets the DirectX 12 Ultimate feature-set. Gigabyte's value-addition comes in the form of a large, premium-looking dual-slot cooling solution. The RX 6600 shares the 7 nm Navi 23 silicon with the RX 6600 XT launched this August, but is slightly cut down to bring down prices. The card could appeal to the e-sports gaming crowd that's playing at 1080p.AMD carved the Radeon RX 6600 Eagle out of the Navi 23 silicon by disabling 4 out of 32 compute units physically present, resulting in 1,792 stream processors, 28 Ray Accelerators, 112 TMUs, and 64 ROPs. The memory size is unchanged at 8 GB, as is the memory type—GDDR6 across a 128-bit wide memory bus. The memory data-rate is lower, at 14 Gbps, compared to 16 Gbps on the Radeon RX 6600 Eagle, resulting in memory bandwidth of 224 GB/s vs. 256 GB/s. AMD's innovation in the memory space with this generation is Infinity Cache, a fast on-die L3 cache memory that cushions data transfers between GPU and memory. For the RX 6600, the same 32 MB Infinity Cache is used as on the Radeon RX 6600 Eagle.The Radeon RX 6600 Eagle is based on the same RDNA2 graphics architecture as the rest of AMD's Radeon RX 6000 series, which has propelled the company back to competitiveness across all consumer graphics market segments, including the enthusiast segment. This is AMD's first architecture that features real-time ray tracing hardware acceleration. Fixed function hardware called Ray Accelerators perform the most compute-intensive part of the ray tracing pipeline (ray intersection calculations), while much of the other ray tracing pipeline is handled by compute shaders. A consequence of this is that AMD has had to significantly increase throughput of its SIMD machinery through not just IPC increases of the RDNA2 compute unit, but also significant increases in engine clocks. This is what makes the RX 6600 an interesting mid-range card for the 1080p crowd.The Radeon RX 6600 Eagle features a large WindForce 3X cooling solution with an aluminium fin-stack heatsink that's fed heat by three copper heat-pipes that make direct contact with the GPU at the base. This heatsink is ventilated by three 100 mm fans. The card is longer than the PCB itself, which means much of the airflow from the third fan goes right through the heatsink and out the backplate from a large cutout. Just like all other RX 6600 cards on the market, the Gigabyte RX 6600 Eagle in this review ticks at AMD reference speeds—no overclocked variants are available at this time. AMD originally designed the RX 6600 to undercut NVIDIA's GeForce RTX 3060 at a lower price. In this review, we find out if the GPU is able to meet that goal with much better cooling.AMD's Radeon RX 6600 Eagle (non-XT) is the smaller brother to the RX 6600 XT launched in August. These cards are targeted at the plethora of 1080p Full HD gamers out there—the "RX 580 and RX 570" equivalent of 2021. Under the hood, the Radeon RX 6600 is powered by the same Navi 23 silicon as the RX 6600 XT. For the non-XT, AMD reduced the core count from 2048 cores to 1792. VRAM remains at 8 GB GDDR6 128-bit; the only surprise here is that memory chips from Hynix are used—this the first time we're seeing GDDR6 from Hynix. AMD also hasn't made any changes to the L3 cache on the GPU, which helps achieve the performance target. On Navi 23, this cache is relatively small with just 32 MB (Navi 22: 96 MB, Navi 21: 128 MB). This is certainly a compromise to reduce the chip's die size and manufacturing cost.On average, across our brand-new 25-game strong test suite, we found the RX 6600 to match the RX 5700 and RTX 2070 exactly at Full HD. Compared to the NVIDIA RTX 3060, RX 6600's direct rival, the NVIDIA card has a tiny 4% lead. The Radeon RX 5700 XT is 10% faster, and the RX 6600 XT is 13% ahead and sits right in the middle of the gap between the RX 6600 and RX 6700 XT. NVIDIA's RTX 3060 Ti is 30% faster than the RX 6600. The aging Vega 64 is 13% behind the RX 6600, just like last-generation's RTX 2060. What's important to point out is that the RX 6600 really is built for 1080p. If you look at our performance results for 1440p and 4K, you'll see that the card falls behind relative to competing cards at those resolutions. The underlying reason is that the L3 cache is relatively small, just big enough for the gaming workloads of 1080p, and cache hit rates go down at higher resolutions.Just like all the other cards available at this time, Gigabyte's Radeon RX 6600 Eagle doesn't come with a factory overclock—a lost opportunity if you ask me. I find it curious that not a single factory overclocked variant of the RX 6600 exists, maybe there's some kind of AMD limitation in play here? If you take into account random variation between test runs, the Gigabyte RX 6600 Eagle achieves exactly the same performance result as the PowerColor RX 6600 Fighter in our launch-day review—as expected given the specifications.Radeon RX 6600 Eagle performance numbers in this review confirm the Radeon RX 6600 as a good choice for playing at the highly popular 1080p Full HD resolution. Nearly all titles in our test suite ran at over 60 FPS at maximum settings. Only Cyberpunk 2077 (52 FPS) and Red Dead Redemption 2 (58 FPS) did not, but were close enough. All these benchmarks were with ray tracing disabled. We also expanded our ray tracing test suite with the new bench, and the RX 6600 really can't deliver here. Framerates are pretty much unplayable across the board as the performance hit from enabling ray tracing is between 30–60%. Competing cards from NVIDIA do much better here, often achieving twice (!) the FPS of the RX 6600. I still think this isn't a big deal. With a card like the RX 6600, enabling ray tracing simply isn't worth it considering the graphics improvement ray tracing brings. In some titles, the RT effects come with a small performance penalty, but only a negligible visual difference that is almost impossible to spot, so much so that you'll wonder "that's what I sacrificed X FPS for?". AMD recently introduced their FSR upscaling technology, which works on all cards, including the NVIDIA and RX 6600, of course. While this could be a mechanism to cushion the performance hit from ray tracing, I'm not convinced it's a trade-off I'm willing to recommend for every single game. Still, FSR can be useful for a few extra FPS with minimal loss in image quality.The Gigabyte Radeon RX 6600 Eagle in this review is the second Radeon RX 6600 card we've tested. The first one was PowerColor's Fighter. Just like the Fighter, the Gigabyte Eagle is clearly designed with cost optimizations in mind. To me it feels like the RX 6600 is the RX 570 of 2021—every dollar counts. What I really like is that Gigabyte included a backplate with their card, even if it's just made from plastic. Actually, the cooling difference between a metal and plastic backplate is almost negligible; it's more about looking more like a complete product, and protecting against damage, of course. The Gigabyte RX 6600 Eagle is also the only triple-fan variant for the RX 6600 XT. Whether there are two or three fans really doesn't make much of a difference here, though. In terms of cooling potential, the card is very similar, only marginally better than the dual-slot PowerColor Fighter as our apples-to-apples heatsink comparison test reveals. Gigabyte prioritized things differently, though. While PowerColor achieved very low noise levels at slightly higher temperature, the Gigabyte Eagle runs a bit cooler, but also louder. With 33 dBA, the card is definitely audible, but clearly not "loud" or "noisy." Considering the incredibly low 65°C, I feel Gigabyte could have allowed slightly higher temperatures, like 70°C, which won't affect longevity or anything else, but achieve better noise levels. It's good to see that idle fan stop has become a mandatory capability nowadays even in this segment—the RX 6600 will shut off its fans in idle, desktop work, and internet browsing.Considering the simple cooler designs, it's surprising how easy the RX 6600 GPU is to cool. The secret sauce is AMD's extremely high energy efficiency. With just 130 W during gaming, the RX 6600 draws very little power, yet offers sufficient punch for 1080p at highest details. This is one of the most energy-efficient graphics cards I ever tested, considerably more efficient than even NVIDIA's Ampere architecture—who would have thought that just a few years ago. The low power draw of the GPU reduces heat output accordingly, which means the cooler can be smaller and run at slower fan speed to achieve a given target temperature.

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Product Details
ProductGIGABYTE Radeon RX 6600 Eagle 8G Graphics CardGigabyte GeForce GT 710 2GB DDR5 Graphics CardPalit GeForce GT 730 2GB DDR3 Graphics CardPalit GeForce GT 1030 2GB DDR4 Graphics Card
Image GIGABYTE Radeon RX 6600 Eagle 8G Graphics Card Gigabyte GeForce GT 710 2GB DDR5 Graphics Card Palit GeForce GT 730 2GB DDR3 Graphics Card Palit GeForce GT 1030 2GB DDR4 Graphics Card
Price 6,200৳ 5,700৳ 8,500৳ 5,900৳ 9,000৳ 8,900৳
ModelModel-80106Model-80174Model-19151GeForce GT 1030
BrandGIGABYTEGIGABYTE
AvailabilityOut Of StockIn StockIn StockIn Stock
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SummaryGIGABYTE Radeon RX 6600 Eagle 8G Graphics Card Based On The RDNA 2 Architecture And Designed To Handle The Graphical Demands Of 1080p Gaming, The Gigabyte Radeon RX 6600 EAGLE Graphics Card Provides An Immersive Gaming Experience With Your PC Games. The GPU Features 8GB Of GDDR6 VRAM And A 128-Bit Memory Interface, Offering Improved Performance And Power Efficiency Over The Previous RDNA-Based Generation.Radeon RX 6600 Eagle Front Panel Of The Card Features A Variety Of Outputs, Such As DisplayPort 1.4 And HDMI 2.1. HDMI 2.1 Supports Up To 48 Gb/S Bandwidth And A Range Of Higher Resolutions And Refresh Rates, Including 8K @ 60 Fps, 4K @ 120 Fps, And Even Up To 10K. The Radeon RX 6600 Supports APIs Such As DirectX 12 Ultimate And OpenGL. These APIs Can Take Advantage Of The GPU's 1792 Stream Processors To Accelerate Parallel Computing Tasks, Taking Some Of The Processing Load Off Of The CPU.For Cooling, Gigabyte Implemented The WINDFORCE 3X Cooling System. Radeon RX 6600 Eagle Cooling System Uses Three 80mm Fans. The Airflow Is Split By The Triangle Fan Edge And Guided Smoothly Through The 3D Stripe Curve On The Fan Surface. The 3D Active Fan Feature Provides Semi-Passive Cooling, Which Means The Fans Will Remain Off When The GPU Is Under A Set Loading Or Temperature For Low Power Gaming.DirectX 12 UltimateDirectX 12 Ultimate Gives Game Developers The Power To Deliver Immersive Visuals With Real-Time DirectX Raytracing (DXR), Variable Rate Shading (VRS), Mesh Shaders, And Sampler Feedback, Taking Games To The Next Level.AMD FidelityFXAMD FidelityFX Is An Open-Source Image-Quality Toolkit Comprising Seven Different Solutions Available For Game Developers To Implement Into Their Games That Are Optimized For AMD RDNA And RDNA 2 Architectures.AMD Radeon Image SharpeningRestores Clarity To In-Game Images That Have Been Softened By Other Post-Process Effects. RIS Combines With GPU Upscaling To Provide Sharp Visuals At Fluid Frame Rates On Very High-Resolution Displays, And Works Across DirectX 9, 12, And Vulkan Titles.AMD FreeSync 2 TechnologyReduce Screen Tearing With AMD's FreeSync 2 Technology. FreeSync 2 Enables The Monitor To Dynamically Adjust Its Refresh Rate To The Frame Rate Being Output By The Graphics Card, Thereby Greatly Reducing Screen Tearing, Stuttering, And Other Artifacts.Radeon Anti-LagOptimized For ESports, Radeon Anti-Lag Improves Competitiveness By Decreasing Input-To-Display Response Times By Up To 31 Percent, Delivering An Experience Similar To Higher Frame Rates.AMD Radeon BoostAMD Radeon Boost Dynamically Lowers Resolution Of The Entire Frame When Fast On-Screen Character Motion Is Detected Via User Input, Allowing For Higher FPS With Little Impact To Quality. GIGABYTE Radeon RX 6600 Eagle 8G Review We have with us the Gigabyte Radeon RX 6600 Eagle, a premium custom-design graphics card based on AMD's latest mid-range GPU. The RX 6600 (non-XT) is designed for 1080p gaming with maximum settings, and meets the DirectX 12 Ultimate feature-set. Gigabyte's value-addition comes in the form of a large, premium-looking dual-slot cooling solution. The RX 6600 shares the 7 nm Navi 23 silicon with the RX 6600 XT launched this August, but is slightly cut down to bring down prices. The card could appeal to the e-sports gaming crowd that's playing at 1080p.AMD carved the Radeon RX 6600 Eagle out of the Navi 23 silicon by disabling 4 out of 32 compute units physically present, resulting in 1,792 stream processors, 28 Ray Accelerators, 112 TMUs, and 64 ROPs. The memory size is unchanged at 8 GB, as is the memory type—GDDR6 across a 128-bit wide memory bus. The memory data-rate is lower, at 14 Gbps, compared to 16 Gbps on the Radeon RX 6600 Eagle, resulting in memory bandwidth of 224 GB/s vs. 256 GB/s. AMD's innovation in the memory space with this generation is Infinity Cache, a fast on-die L3 cache memory that cushions data transfers between GPU and memory. For the RX 6600, the same 32 MB Infinity Cache is used as on the Radeon RX 6600 Eagle.The Radeon RX 6600 Eagle is based on the same RDNA2 graphics architecture as the rest of AMD's Radeon RX 6000 series, which has propelled the company back to competitiveness across all consumer graphics market segments, including the enthusiast segment. This is AMD's first architecture that features real-time ray tracing hardware acceleration. Fixed function hardware called Ray Accelerators perform the most compute-intensive part of the ray tracing pipeline (ray intersection calculations), while much of the other ray tracing pipeline is handled by compute shaders. A consequence of this is that AMD has had to significantly increase throughput of its SIMD machinery through not just IPC increases of the RDNA2 compute unit, but also significant increases in engine clocks. This is what makes the RX 6600 an interesting mid-range card for the 1080p crowd.The Radeon RX 6600 Eagle features a large WindForce 3X cooling solution with an aluminium fin-stack heatsink that's fed heat by three copper heat-pipes that make direct contact with the GPU at the base. This heatsink is ventilated by three 100 mm fans. The card is longer than the PCB itself, which means much of the airflow from the third fan goes right through the heatsink and out the backplate from a large cutout. Just like all other RX 6600 cards on the market, the Gigabyte RX 6600 Eagle in this review ticks at AMD reference speeds—no overclocked variants are available at this time. AMD originally designed the RX 6600 to undercut NVIDIA's GeForce RTX 3060 at a lower price. In this review, we find out if the GPU is able to meet that goal with much better cooling.AMD's Radeon RX 6600 Eagle (non-XT) is the smaller brother to the RX 6600 XT launched in August. These cards are targeted at the plethora of 1080p Full HD gamers out there—the "RX 580 and RX 570" equivalent of 2021. Under the hood, the Radeon RX 6600 is powered by the same Navi 23 silicon as the RX 6600 XT. For the non-XT, AMD reduced the core count from 2048 cores to 1792. VRAM remains at 8 GB GDDR6 128-bit; the only surprise here is that memory chips from Hynix are used—this the first time we're seeing GDDR6 from Hynix. AMD also hasn't made any changes to the L3 cache on the GPU, which helps achieve the performance target. On Navi 23, this cache is relatively small with just 32 MB (Navi 22: 96 MB, Navi 21: 128 MB). This is certainly a compromise to reduce the chip's die size and manufacturing cost.On average, across our brand-new 25-game strong test suite, we found the RX 6600 to match the RX 5700 and RTX 2070 exactly at Full HD. Compared to the NVIDIA RTX 3060, RX 6600's direct rival, the NVIDIA card has a tiny 4% lead. The Radeon RX 5700 XT is 10% faster, and the RX 6600 XT is 13% ahead and sits right in the middle of the gap between the RX 6600 and RX 6700 XT. NVIDIA's RTX 3060 Ti is 30% faster than the RX 6600. The aging Vega 64 is 13% behind the RX 6600, just like last-generation's RTX 2060. What's important to point out is that the RX 6600 really is built for 1080p. If you look at our performance results for 1440p and 4K, you'll see that the card falls behind relative to competing cards at those resolutions. The underlying reason is that the L3 cache is relatively small, just big enough for the gaming workloads of 1080p, and cache hit rates go down at higher resolutions.Just like all the other cards available at this time, Gigabyte's Radeon RX 6600 Eagle doesn't come with a factory overclock—a lost opportunity if you ask me. I find it curious that not a single factory overclocked variant of the RX 6600 exists, maybe there's some kind of AMD limitation in play here? If you take into account random variation between test runs, the Gigabyte RX 6600 Eagle achieves exactly the same performance result as the PowerColor RX 6600 Fighter in our launch-day review—as expected given the specifications.Radeon RX 6600 Eagle performance numbers in this review confirm the Radeon RX 6600 as a good choice for playing at the highly popular 1080p Full HD resolution. Nearly all titles in our test suite ran at over 60 FPS at maximum settings. Only Cyberpunk 2077 (52 FPS) and Red Dead Redemption 2 (58 FPS) did not, but were close enough. All these benchmarks were with ray tracing disabled. We also expanded our ray tracing test suite with the new bench, and the RX 6600 really can't deliver here. Framerates are pretty much unplayable across the board as the performance hit from enabling ray tracing is between 30–60%. Competing cards from NVIDIA do much better here, often achieving twice (!) the FPS of the RX 6600. I still think this isn't a big deal. With a card like the RX 6600, enabling ray tracing simply isn't worth it considering the graphics improvement ray tracing brings. In some titles, the RT effects come with a small performance penalty, but only a negligible visual difference that is almost impossible to spot, so much so that you'll wonder "that's what I sacrificed X FPS for?". AMD recently introduced their FSR upscaling technology, which works on all cards, including the NVIDIA and RX 6600, of course. While this could be a mechanism to cushion the performance hit from ray tracing, I'm not convinced it's a trade-off I'm willing to recommend for every single game. Still, FSR can be useful for a few extra FPS with minimal loss in image quality.The Gigabyte Radeon RX 6600 Eagle in this review is the second Radeon RX 6600 card we've tested. The first one was PowerColor's Fighter. Just like the Fighter, the Gigabyte Eagle is clearly designed with cost optimizations in mind. To me it feels like the RX 6600 is the RX 570 of 2021—every dollar counts. What I really like is that Gigabyte included a backplate with their card, even if it's just made from plastic. Actually, the cooling difference between a metal and plastic backplate is almost negligible; it's more about looking more like a complete product, and protecting against damage, of course. The Gigabyte RX 6600 Eagle is also the only triple-fan variant for the RX 6600 XT. Whether there are two or three fans really doesn't make much of a difference here, though. In terms of cooling potential, the card is very similar, only marginally better than the dual-slot PowerColor Fighter as our apples-to-apples heatsink comparison test reveals. Gigabyte prioritized things differently, though. While PowerColor achieved very low noise levels at slightly higher temperature, the Gigabyte Eagle runs a bit cooler, but also louder. With 33 dBA, the card is definitely audible, but clearly not "loud" or "noisy." Considering the incredibly low 65°C, I feel Gigabyte could have allowed slightly higher temperatures, like 70°C, which won't affect longevity or anything else, but achieve better noise levels. It's good to see that idle fan stop has become a mandatory capability nowadays even in this segment—the RX 6600 will shut off its fans in idle, desktop work, and internet browsing.Considering the simple cooler designs, it's surprising how easy the RX 6600 GPU is to cool. The secret sauce is AMD's extremely high energy efficiency. With just 130 W during gaming, the RX 6600 draws very little power, yet offers sufficient punch for 1080p at highest details. This is one of the most energy-efficient graphics cards I ever tested, considerably more efficient than even NVIDIA's Ampere architecture—who would have thought that just a few years ago. The low power draw of the GPU reduces heat output accordingly, which means the cooler can be smaller and run at slower fan speed to achieve a given target temperature...Gigabyte GeForce GT 710 2GB DDR5 Graphics CardPowered by NVIDIA Gigabyte GeForce GT 710 Integrated with 2GB GDDR5 64bit memory interface Core clock: 954MHz Features Dual-link DVI-I / HDMI Support PCI Express 2.0 x8 bus interface Recommended system power supply requirement: 300WGigabyte GeForce GT 710 2GB DDR5 Review Gigabyte GeForce GT 710 Advances in integrated graphics performance have all but destroyed the market for such low-end graphics cards in new PCs. Modern CPUs from Intel, and even more so those from AMD, come with built in graphics capabilities which are more than adequate for most non-gaming purposes.The Gigabyte GeForce GT 710 specification is most certainly that of an entry-level product. With 192 CUDA cores and just 1GB of DDR3 memory, connected via a 64-bit bus, it’s clear that this card isn’t designed for high performance. It may be considerably faster than many of Intel’s existing integrated graphics solutions, it’s still best purchased for its features rather than its speed.The Gigabyte GeForce GT 710  gives you one each of VGA, HDMI and DVI-D outputs and, if you have the right peripherals, you’ll be able to display 3D content on supported TVs and displays with billions of colours and support for 7.1 surround sound. The card can output on all three ports simultaneously for multi-monitor setups, although sadly there’s no DisplayPort available. Resolutions at 60Hz max out at 2560×1600 for digital outputs and 2048×1536 via the VGA adapter, but you can setup up to 3840×2160 or even 4096×2160 over HDMI if you drop the refresh rate to 30Hz and 24Hz respectively. (You won’t want to do that – it’s possible but not recommended.)Thanks to its passively cooled, fanless design, the runs completely silently and the absence of moving parts will increase long-term reliability over and above fan-based coolers which will can fill with dust and seize up over time.One of the key advantages of this particular card, other than the price, is ability to fit in just about any PC. Measuring only 68.8 by 114.3mm, the EVGA GeForce GT 710 is relatively tiny, and comes with full height and half height brackets in the box, making it suitable for the vast majority of PC form factors, although the thickness of the passive heat sink means it’ll take up two PCI Express slots.Thankfully, EVGA makes six slightly different versions of this card, so if you need a single slot solution, you can opt for one with a fan-based cooler instead. You can also opt for a 2GB version of a fixed full-height board.Nvidia claims the GeForce GT710 has “up to 10x better performance than integrated graphics”, but don’t buy it for that reason as it’s really not a sensible performance upgrade for gaming. When it comes to frame per second, you’d most likely find you’ve transformed your PC from “Don’t even think about it” to “Nope, still really not fast enough”.Let’s keep things in perspective here. The GT 710 costs less to buy than a single top-tier game, so if you can afford to buy games, you really should be able to budget for a faster card than this.However, if you’re really determined, and your expectations are low, you can get some less demanding titles to run faster than a slide show. Crank the quality settings all the way down as low as possible, stick to 720p resolution and some titles do become playable – even recent releases.DiRT Rally, for example, averaged 76.5fps at 720p in Ultra Low settings in our tests. You can certainly play the game with perfectly smooth graphics using the GeForce GT 710, but it’s far from pretty and you’re unlikely to be happy with the low-quality version of the game these settings deliver...Palit GeForce GT 730 2GB DDR3 Graphics Card Palit GeForce GT 730 Graphics Card can speed up your PC multimedia experience. Upgrade from integrated graphics to the new Palit GeForce GT 730 dedicated card and enjoy faster PC gaming, video, photos, and web. It has 64bit Memory Interface and it supports PCI-E 2.0 x 8 Bus. Palit GeForce GT 730 is a 2048MB DDR3 type Graphics card. It has DVI, VGA and HDMI output options. Maximum Digital Resolution is of 2560x1600. It has 2 years of warranty. Palit GeForce GT 730 2GB DDR3 Review Gigabyte GT 730 Review is based on Kepler architecture. Since we are ready to welcome the new generation from Nvidia and already have seen Maxwell and Pascal, I will not be discussing the Kepler architecture here. GT 730 features GK208 chip from Nvidia having a 28nm technology and 87mm² die size.The card I am looking at is GV-N730D3-2GI with 2GB DDR3 VRAM and 64-bit interface. It is clocked at 902MHz. Memory clock is 1800MHz. It supports PCIe 2.0. This card is actually a graphics accelerator.The card comes in a standard cardboard box. On the top side, there is a Gigabyte brand name printed on the top left. 2GB DDR3 is printed in a stamped format on the left side. The card is compliant with PCIe 3.0 motherboards. Card’s model no is printed on the bottom right side. 2048MB DDR3 is printed on the bottom right side.The backside of the packaging box has GEFORCE GT 730 is printed on the top left side. Main features of the card are printed in 9 different languages. There is a large sticker pasted on the right side having EAN, UPC, serial no printed on it. The opening side of the box has Gigabyte printed on the left side and GT 730 printed on the right side.The left and right side have identical printouts except that on the right side there is additional printing content with salient features of the card. The rear side is identical to the opening side.GT 730 series of graphics cards from Nvidia are rather Graphics Accelerator rather than gaming. The GT 730 is not an exception to that. Nvidia targeted the GT 730 to accelerate the multimedia experience using the dedicated graphics card and to deliver 3x faster gaming performance than the integrated graphics. The Gigabyte GT 730 Review GV-N730D3-2GI is Gigabyte’s take on the GEFORCE GT 730.It is a single slot design with the small form factor. The dimension of the card is 27x167x115mm (HxLxW). The card supports maximum digital resolution of 4096×2160 through HDMI connector. It supports maximum Analog resolution of 2048×1536. Despite being that small it can hook up to 3 displays with HD content. The card has a support for DX12 and OpenGL 4.4. Recommended PSU Wattage is 300W.GT 730 card has a simple design to it without any fancy lighting and backplate of any sort. The PCB is in blue color and made in China. There is a single 80mm fan delivering the cooling requirements of this gigabyte gt 730 card review. There is a Gigabyte printed sticker pasted on the motor hub of the fan. There is a single aluminum block which is cut to mimic the fan-like design.This aluminum heatsink is covering the GPU and probably the VRAM chips. Something shocked me, to say the least when looking at the PCIe connector. GV-N630D3-2GI Rev: 1.0 is printed above the PCIe connector. Gigabyte is this a typo? Anyhow, GPU-Z confirmed it to be the GT 730 so it is GT 730 indeed. Nomenclature is something confusing.There is a single 3-pin header on the left side of the fan to power up the fan. The fan is throwing fresh air directly on the GPU, VRAM and power delivery sub-components on the PCB. There are pinout reading points on the right side of the PCB for additional referencing.The backside of the card is as simple as it could get. There is no backplate which is understandable. There is a serial no sticker pasted on the left side. None of the spring-loaded screws are covered with Warranty Void sticker. I did not remove the cooler from the PCB due to restriction from the source. To remove the cooler, remove the spring loaded screws from the backside of the PCB.As expected, there is no power connector on this card. It is taking 75W from the PCIe slot of the motherboard. The card is featuring the Gigabyte’s Ultra Durable 2 technology. It is using Low RDS (on) MOSFET Design and Ferrite Core Choke Design to minimize the power loss and all solid capacitors design. SpecificationVideo Memory SpecificationsType DDR3Size 2048MBResolution Maximum Digital Resolution: 2560x1600 Maximum VGA Resolution: 2048x1536Core Clock 902BUS Type PCI-E 2.0 x 8CUDA Cores 384InterfaceHDMI YesDVI Dual-Link DVI-DPower SpecificationsRecommended PSU 300 WConsumption 23 WApplication Programming InterfacesDirectX 12OpenGL 4.5Physical SpecificationsDimensions Height: 1 Slot 115mm x 69mmWarrantyManufacturing Warranty 2 years..Palit GeForce GT 1030 2GB DDR4 Graphics CardPalit GeForce GT 1030 2GB DDR4 Graphics Card is powered by the award-winning NVIDIA Pascal architecture, accelerates your entire PC experience. Its powerful graphics engine and state-of-the-art technologies provide a performance upgrade to drive today's most demanding PC applications. You can do it all. Video editing. Gaming. Transforming your pictures at HD resolutions. This powerful card lets you do it all faster. Palit GeForce GT 1030 comes with all the performance goodness of GeForce Experience. This is the gateway to great PC gaming, giving you industry-leading NVIDIA drivers for optimal performance and best-in-class stability—all with one-click convenience. ThunderMaster is a utility program for the graphics card under Windows and provides you to boost the performance of the graphics card and monitor the GPU information, which will only function correctly in conjunction with your new graphics adapter. Palit GeForce GT 1030 2GB DDR4 Review Gigabyte sent over its GeForce GT 1030 Low Profile 2G to represent Nvidia’s latest addition. The card ships with a full-sized slot bracket in place, but it includes a half-height bracket for slim enclosures as well. Although our sample is actively cooled, Gigabyte also sells a passive model sporting the same clock rates. Low-profile and passively-cooled? Yup.Palit GeForce GT 1030 TDP is a mere 30W, so we can already guess that power consumption, thermals, and acoustics will be some of this board’s advantages over the competition. But can it keep up in our benchmark suite? After all, that’s what determines whether the GT 1030 succeeds GT 730 in our list of gaming graphics cards.GeForce GT 1030 utilizes an all-new graphics processor called GP108, composed of 1.8 billion transistors. It’s a teeny thing at just 70mm², thanks to the same 14nm FinFET process used to manufacture GP107. Compare that to GeForce GT 730’s GK208 chip with 1.02 billion transistors in an 84mm² die. Or how about the GeForce GTX 750 Ti, which we’re making the Palit GeForce GT 1030 battle in today’s benchmarks? That card’s GM107 GPU has a similar transistor count as GP108, but in a 148mm² die, owing to its 28nm manufacturing process.Here’s the thing, though: whereas GeForce GTX 750 Ti employs five Streaming Multiprocessors, GT 1030 comes equipped with three. Given 128 CUDA cores per SM/SMM in the Pascal and Maxwell architectures, that’s 384 cores for GT 1030 and 640 for GTX 750 Ti. Both designs also expose eight texture units per SM, totaling 24 on GeForce GT 1030, while GTX 750 Ti gets 40. The two GPUs feature a pair of ROP partitions, giving you up to 16 32-bit integer pixels per clock. However, those partitions are aligned with 256KB slices of L2 cache on GP108 and 1MB slices of L2 on GM107. That means Palit GeForce GT 1030 includes 512KB L2 total—a big reduction from GTX 750 Ti’s 2MB. And whereas GeForce GTX 750 Ti utilizes two 64-bit memory controllers, GT 1030’s specs break the memory bus down into a pair of 32-bit controllers, adding up to a 64-bit interface. That’s a lot of lost resources for a ~4% difference in complexity.Nvidia goes a long way to overcoming those deficits in Palit GeForce GT 1030 with higher clock rates. Our sample employs a 1227 MHz base frequency and a typical GPU Boost rating of 1468 MHz. In contrast, GeForce GTX 750 Ti starts at 1020 MHz and boosts just slightly to 1085 MHz. Of course, a 64-bit aggregate memory bus cripples GT 1030’s peak bandwidth to 48 GB/s using 6 Gb/s GDDR5; GTX 750 Ti’s wider interface facilitates up to 86.4 GB/s.In the end, GP108 offers a much higher pixel fill rate than GK208 (19.8 GP/s vs. 7.2 GP/s). Its texture rate is much greater, too (29.8 GT/s vs. 14.4 GT/s). Further, Nvidia says that the work it did to enable Pascal’s aggressive clock rates and proper asynchronous compute support via dynamic load balancing added to the transistor budget. Palit GeForce GT 1030 uses a complete GP108 processor—there are no disabled resources waiting to be switched on. It’s just a much denser GPU than GK208.Palit GeForce GT 1030 competition from AMD lands somewhere between GM107 and GK208. Its Radeon RX 550 is a little more expensive (~$85) and slightly more power-hungry (50W). We’ve seen low-profile and “single-slot” versions, but not both. Nothing with passive cooling, either. On the other hand, you get 512 Stream processors, 32 texture units, and 16 ROPs in a 2.2 billion-transistor Polaris 12 GPU. That translates to a pixel fill rate of 17.6 GP/s and a texturing rate of 35.2 GT/s. Faster 7 Gb/s GDDR5 modules on a wider 128-bit memory bus give AMD a 233% theoretical bandwidth advantage, too.And yet, Nvidia tells us its GeForce GT 1030 should trade blows with AMD’s pricier solution. If that turns out to be true, it’d be quite an achievement for a smaller and simpler graphics card able to fit into PCs that might not accommodate a Radeon RX 550.SpecificationVideo Memory SpecificationsType DDR4Size 2048MBResolution 4096x2160@60HzCore Clock Graphics Clock: 1151MHz Boost Clock: 1379MHzMemory Clock 2100MHz 16.8 GB/secBUS Type PCI-E 3.0 x 4Memory Interface 64bitStream Processors NVIDIA Pascal architectureCUDA Cores 384InterfaceHDMI HDMI 2.0DVI Single-Link DVI-DPower SpecificationsRecommended PSU 300 WConsumption 20 WApplication Programming InterfacesDirectX 12OpenGL 4.5Physical SpecificationsDimensions Height: 1 Slot 135 x 69 x 20mmWarrantyManufacturing Warranty 2 years..

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