NVIDIA 8600GT, 8300GT & GS

Sledgehammer70Sledgehammer70 California Icrontian
edited March 2007 in Science & Tech
While ATI delays the release of the R600 chip, NVIDIA is playing it smart: the products keep rolling out. As <a href="http://www.short-media.com/news/nvidia_quadro_fx_4600_fx_5600&quot; target="_blank">we have reported</a>, NVIDIA has chips for the casual gamer on the way as well.

NVIDIA seems to already have a replacement for the ever-popular 7600GT and, yes, it is a DirectX 10 variant. The 8600GT will be first out of the gates and will sport cores running 540/1400MHz up to 580/1550MHz with a 256-bit memory interface. They are expected to have 256MB of GDDR3 memory, depending on which NVIDIA partner you purchase from. The 8600GT is expected to hit the market in the $149-189 range and will come in the standard PCI-E SLI-supported layout.

The 8300GT and GS will sport half of the shader processors that the 8600GT will come equipped with, and will have cores running at 500/1200MHz (GT) and 480/1000MHz (GS). NVIDIA will be dropping the memory interface to 128-bit on these cards and will have a range of 256MB of memory down to 128MB. We are expecting NVIDIA to price these cards from $79-119.

Overall, the mid-range cards seem to be pretty promising in price and offer a valuable upgrade into the DirectX 10 market. Keep in mind, though, that DirectX 10 games are few and far between. Presently, it's primarily a card to <em>prepare</em> you for it.

We've also heard rumors on an 8800 Go-series chip which will run a bit slower than its desktop brother, but were not able to squeeze any solid numbers from our sources.

Comments

  • edited March 2007
    What about the 89XX refresh cards? Will these appear at the same time or after the midrange G80 variants?
  • Sledgehammer70Sledgehammer70 California Icrontian
    edited March 2007
    From what I hear the 89xx series will roll out just after ATI hits the market with its DX10 offerings.
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