Wednesday, September 23rd 2009

Gigabyte's GeForce GT 220 OC Accelerator Spotted

Gigabyte's newest entry-level graphics accelerator is based on one of NVIDIA's first GPUs built on the 40 nm fab-process. The Gigabyte GeForce GT 220 OC (GV-N220OC-1G) is based on the new GT216-300 GPU from NVIDIA that features 48 shader processors, support for DirectX 10.1, and a 128-bit wide GDDR3 memory interface accommodating 1 GB of memory. The GPU is clocked at 720 MHz, with its shader domain at 1567 MHz, and memory at 800 MHz (1600 MHz DDR). With connectivity options that include DVI-D, D-Sub, and HDMI with a gold-plated connector (merely aesthetic, as digital connections don't benefit), the card sports a cooler design similar to its custom-design Radeon HD 4770 1 GB accelerator. The accelerator starts shipping soon at an unknown yet affordable price.
Source: VideoKonsolu
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18 Comments on Gigabyte's GeForce GT 220 OC Accelerator Spotted

#1
tkpenalty
btarunrGigabyte's newest entry-level graphics accelerator is based on one of NVIDIA's first GPUs built on the 40 nm fab-process. The Gigabyte GeForce GT 220 OC (GV-N220OC-1G) is based on the new GT216-300 GPU from NVIDIA that features 48 shader processors, support for DirectX 10.1, and a 128-bit wide GDDR3 memory interface accommodating 1 GB of memory. The GPU is clocked at 720 MHz, with its shader domain at 1567 MHz, and memory at 800 MHz (1600 MHz DDR). With connectivity options that include DVI-D, D-Sub, and HDMI with a gold-plated connector (merely aesthetic, as digital connections don't benefit), the card sports a cooler design similar to its custom-design Radeon HD 4770 1 GB accelerator. The accelerator starts shipping soon at an unknown yet affordable price.

www.techpowerup.com/img/09-09-23/36a_thm.jpg

Source: VideoKonsolu
Accelero L something custom.
Posted on Reply
#2
Cheeseball
Not a Potato
I wonder how well this does on 48sps. If it has the efficiency of a GTX 260 and the raw power of a 9600GT (64sps which can nearly match a 8800GT's 112sp core), then it'd probably be a good deal.
Posted on Reply
#3
JrRacinFan
Served 5k and counting ...
Looks and sounds like a 9600GSO with a die shrink.
Posted on Reply
#4
Unregistered
WTF, where "GT 300" preview, they said they would steal the thunder from AMD and now the best they can do is launch this die shrink "9600 GSO" :laugh:

and they say DX 10.1 was useless, give me a break, :wtf:

up's maybe these is "the card" that they say will "out perform" cypress,

hmm better start to see the benches :rockout:
Posted on Edit | Reply
#5
extrasalty
This is probably the remaining 98% of the GTX300 wafers.:roll:
Posted on Reply
#6
toyo
Wow, in THIS day, .... how come not another... nVidia should have kept at least 2-3 days more their pants on, so they should not associate themselves with 5800 series with this lousy release :/
Posted on Reply
#7
RadeonProVega
Does that card need a power connector, i can't see the other side, anymore photos?
Posted on Reply
#8
Semi-Lobster
u2konlineDoes that card need a power connector, i can't see the other side, anymore photos?
It shouldn't. So far the GT 220 has been an OEM videocard and it does not require any PCIe connectors.
Posted on Reply
#9
VIPER
toyoWow, in THIS day, .... how come not another... nVidia should have kept at least 2-3 days more their pants on, so they should not associate themselves with 5800 series with this lousy release :/
It's a GIGABYTE release, not a nVidia release. And it has GBT own design.
Posted on Reply
#10
[Ion]
WCG Team Assistant
Doesn't look all that impressive to me, I would rather have a 9600GSO 96sp or a 9800GT.
Posted on Reply
#11
Zubasa
[Ion]Doesn't look all that impressive to me, I would rather have a 9600GSO 96sp or a 9800GT.
That is if you can find one that is not 8 rops and not 128-bit memory :nutkick:
Posted on Reply
#12
Kenshai
extrasaltyThis is probably the remaining 98% of the GTX300 wafers.:roll:
This is GT216 not GT300, I think you should wait a bit.
Posted on Reply
#13
extrasalty
KenshaiThis is GT216 not GT300, I think you should wait a bit.
I was trying to be funny about their roumored 2% yield on GT300:slap:
nV are the king of rebadging and they have to do something with the defective dies- after all the those defective wafers are expensive:laugh:
Posted on Reply
#14
Hayder_Master
still my old speech stand
nvidia can't get all of this in same time until 2010
DX11+55nm+Gddr5
Posted on Reply
#15
Kenshai
hayder.masterstill my old speech stand
nvidia can't get all of this in same time until 2010
DX11+55nm+Gddr5
GT216 in 40nm :p
Posted on Reply
#16
Unregistered
KenshaiGT216 in 40nm :p
nothing matter, just old boring nvdia renaming scheme with die shrink and DX 10.1 support, even in the beginning of DX 11 era they still launch old product
#18
Cheeseball
Not a Potato
...die shrink and DX 10.1 support...
Just this already constitutes a new core.

Die shrink from 55nm to 40nm? Big.
DX10.1 support? Big. (according to ATi)

Sure, it's not that innovative but it does give the HD45xx series and lesser some needed competition.

If there was a low profile version of this card, it would be perfect.
Posted on Reply
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