FiringSquad: Home of the Hardcore Gamer - Games, Hardware, Reviews and NewsSubmit your own or view users' CPU overclocking results!

  
 Home   News   THE MATRIX   Deals   Hardware   Games   Features   Media   Products   Forums   FS China 
AddThis Social Bookmark Button

Home : Hardware : Video Cards : GeForce 256 Overclocking Tests
» Join the Greatest Gaming Community NOW! (It's free)

Already a member? Login
 



Random Gallery >> 
Click to view high-res Image!
Total War: Shogun 2 Fall of the Samurai February 2012 Screenshots [12] (0)

My Crank that S#!t up entry :) (15) by ZEZgames
[FX] 3-Screen Effect - Guide (part-1) (0) by nGAGE
[Entry] Crank That S#!t Up Video Contest (5) by Animehero
Crank That S#!t Up!!!! (6) by CamoDaGreat
Crank It Up! (11) by Kilos
Nvidia+Socom Cranks that $#%^ UP!!!!! (4) by mrinfinit3
Crankin' it up today... and tomorrow! (8) by Slipdisk
Drink That S#!t Up! (14) by p4l1ndr0m3
ENTRY FOR CONTEST (4) by Alexander470
CRANG That S#!T Up! (15) by ElwinRansom

More Blogs >>




GeForce 256 Overclocking Tests
October 20, 1999   James Yu > [View My Other Articles]
Product Info | User Reviews | Article Images(9) | Image Gallery | Comments | Forum Thread
Introduction

Overclocking: Is everyone doing it?

Everyone seems to overclock their CPUs, but what about their video cards? Originally, I never thought the performance gains garnered from overclocking the video card actually justified all the trouble, but then the Voodoo3 and TNT2 entered the scene. The Voodoo3 2000 was a serious overclocker. We could get the 143/143MHz (core/memory) card up to 175/175MHz in our tests, and we've heard reports that many could reach 183/183MHz. You can't ignore 20-30% gains. The TNT2 was also a sweet overclocker. Many vanilla TNT2 cards could easily reach Ultra speeds and higher.

Most people still don't overclock their video cards, but video card overclocking is becoming easier. Today, manufacturers such as Matrox and Guillemot provide their own overclocking utilities. They don't want users to resort to third party overclocking programs that might do serious harm to the cards. Still, overclocking your video card is pretty dangerous. It's much easier to break a video card than a CPU through overclocking. While Intel can afford to leave headroom for processors, 3D card manufacturers have to squeeze the most performance out of each chip because of all the competition. (Remember back in the day when AMD and Cyrix both put out extremely hot processors in order to compete with Intel?)

The GeForce 256

What happens when you get your hands on couple $250-$350 video cards? You try to break them of course! We didn't actually break them, but we did try overclocking them. We overclocked our DDR and SDRAM NVIDIA GeForce 256 reference cards. What did we find out? Well, 23 million transistors on a .22 micron process result in an incredibly hot card. Read on to find out how the cards performed.

    This is how we did it Next!
Blog + Share: Digg Del.icio.us Reddit SU furl • More: AddThis Social Bookmark Button
Send This Article to a Friend!  
Table of Contents
  Print Entire Article  

MATRIX CONTENT » RANDOM MEDIA BLOG More Blogs >>
No ratings yet
» Please rate this
Read this Media-Blog entry!» The Nvidia "Crank That S#!T Up" Quiz Show, Part 2 (6)
by mohawkade (35) Talk with this user on their Shout Box (My other blogs) Posted 18 months ago


 Hottest Topics
Skyrim mod toolkit and Steam Workshop integration arrive with free official high-resolution texture pack (6)
Blizzard appealing to block Valve trademarking DOTA (5)
Bethesda shows modders how it's done: see what Skyrim developers added during free-form 'Game Jam' week (5)
Diablo 3 dev diary explains nightmare mode difficulty (5)
Obsidian has 'Kickstarter fever', asks for suggestions (3)
Today's News >>
Today's Siteseeing >>


 Table of Contents


 Quick Facts
The Creative Labs is set to ship out their SDRAM GeForce cards this Thursday.


FiringSquad is powered by... Back to Top Site MapContact UsAdvertise With Us Privacy StatementAbout Us  
News RSSSiteseeing RSSArticle RSS   © 1998-2012 FS Media, Inc. All Rights Reserved