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We recently changed our testing settings for Enemy Territory: Quake Wars.
As Quake Wars is based on the aging Doom 3 engine meant that Quake Wars did not require all that much graphic-horsepower to get upwards of a 100 FPS in our benchmarks, so we decided to make this our high-resolution, high-AA test. While not that many people game at 1920x1200 resolutions with 8x AA, with this $200 Gigabyte HD 3870, you have enough power to do so -- at least in Quake Wars.
While the 8800 GT and the HD 3870 are neck-to-neck in this bench, it is the shader processor optimizations found in the 9600 GT that really shine here.
And by the way, if you think those scores look a bit strange for the XFX 8800 GTS 512 -- well, I did to. But I double checked them, and they are correct. While the 8800 GTS 512 is a fast card indeed, for whatever reason, with a 8x AA setting it does not perform very well in this bench, getting bested by the much cheaper 9600 GT.


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Personally I haven't been using Cat 8.10; but that's what I've been reading.
i dont want to connect it to an external low volt source or use speed controller like Fan mate ?
thnx
I'll be testing it tomorrow, so I'll investigate further and get back to you.
Worse case though, you could run a manual fan control program (such as riva tuner) and keep the fan running at %60 or %70 and you should be fine.
Oh and just btw, just checked out the card's price on newegg, and the first user review that popped up says the fan runs "nearly silent" so that also lends me to believe yours is misfiring somehow.
And you do have the HD3870 as pictured in my review right? Just wanted to check because there are multiple models of the Gigabyte HD3870.
I'm a bit confused. The review said the Gigabyte 3870 card was quiet. It's anything but unfortunately. The fan stays on 100% all the time. This would have been a great card if the fan was temperature controlled.
BTW we are missing pictures throughout my last two video card reviews.
It seems that we are being hot-linked a lot more now, and that is somehow getting our pictures taken off the articles due to cache issues. Developer guys here at home base are checking it out and will be fixing the problem soon, most certainly.
Jeff17 -=> This is the only HD3870 with DDR3 as far as I know.
Also, the Powercolor HD3850 Xtreme PCS that was used in the benchmarks is a factory-overclocked, super-charged HD3850 that uses DDR4 memory. So, it is sort of a reverse match-up of what you might normally see... it is a bit surprising how close the two came in the benchmarks. The low memory clock of the Gigabyte 3870 definitely does not help the cards performance -- but this can be overcome by a reasonable overclock.
Here's an old post about the differences between GDDR3 and GDDR4 (stolen from a forum):
GDDR3 vs GDDR4
1) 7.2 vs 11.2 GBps per chip max data speed
2) 1.8 vs 2.8 GBps per pin max data rate
3) 1.8 vs 1.5 v minimum power consumption which results in a 20-25% energy savings
4) 2.1 vs 1.9 v maximum power for overclocking
5) 4 vs 8 bit burst length which allows more memory bandwidth and lower latency
6) no DBI vs DBI: Data Bus Inversion - it takes more energy to transfer 0s than 1s. When there are a lot of 0s to move, it will send them as 1s instead and then use DBI to signal that all those 1s needed to be flipped back to 0s. This is a power saving feature.
7) Three point voltage control via video card driver for fine tuning and overclocking
I haven't specifically tested for speed differences between GDDR3 and GDDR4 (hey not a bad idea for an article hmm..) but I can tell you, that it makes a significant difference, but not a HUGE difference. As in, the difference isn't big enough to make or break a card; it is only a small performance difference; but it is there.
I love this card at first sight. Gigabyte done very good job