AXLE GeForce GTX 460 768 MB Review 19

AXLE GeForce GTX 460 768 MB Review

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Value and Conclusion

  • The NVIDIA MSRP for the GeForce GTX 460 1 GB is $229, while the 768 MB version costs $199.
  • Huge overclocking potential
  • Low power consumption
  • Very quiet
  • HDMI output
  • GDDR5 memory
  • Support for DirectX 11
  • Support for NVIDIA 3D Vision Surround
  • Support for CUDA, PhysX and 3D Vision
  • Slim bundle
  • No mini-HDMI adapter included
  • DirectX 11 relevance very limited at this time
  • Memory chips not cooled
NVIDIA's new GeForce GTX 460 is Fermi done right. Whereas the GF100 based products were plagued by excessive power consumption resulting in high temperatures and noise levels, the GTX 460 delivers massive improvements here. Essentially NVIDIA managed to reduce idle power consumption below ATI's HD 5000 levels, and gaming power consumption to slightly higher but similar levels. This improvement in power consumption trickles down to temperatures and cooler noise helping NVIDIA's new card to be able to compete there.
On all our tested cards we have seen awesome overclocking potential going well into the 800 MHz area which equates to around 25% higher clock. Memory overclocks are less spectacular which is partly due to the lack of cooling on the memory, and the selection of 1 GHz chips. I also have a feeling that NVIDIA's memory controller handles high clocks not as well as ATI's implementation. Nevertheless, if you are an overclocker and want to maximize the performance of your investment, the GeForce GTX 460 series is a great choice.
NVIDIA offers two GTX 460 variants at launch time, one with 768 MB and one with 1 GB. Aside from the obvious potential confusion with end users, the differences in actual performance are rather slim. On average we see only 7% performance difference between both cards which is very small considering the 25% difference in specs for memory size, memory bus width and number of ROPs. Essentially this means that the 768 MB version is the one to get unless you have a specific reason you think you need more memory, or speculate on the higher resale value of the card at a later time.
AXLE's GeForce GTX 460 uses NVIDIA's reference design to the letter, which means it benefits from the great job NVIDIA did with their latest card. Only the slim bundle and missing mini-HDMI adapter dim the great impression. However, this allows AXLE to possible sell their card cheaper than the competition, which may end up making a difference in the buying decision of many users. The choice of implementing a 768 MB version instead of the more expensive, only slighter 1 GB card is also a smart move.
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Dec 22nd, 2024 19:25 EST change timezone

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