“Two retail Sapphire Radeon HD 2900 XT video cards, one Intel Bad Axe 2, and two CrossFire bridge connectors equals ATI’s most powerful graphics combination at this time for gaming. We find out if two Radeon HD 2900 XT video cards in CrossFire is worthy or a waste.”Here are some more Graphics Card articles from around the web:
- ASUS EN8800GTX Graphics Card @ TechARP
- ASUS EN8600GTS and Foxconn 8600GT-256 @ HEXUS
- XFX GeForce 8600GT w/ Heatpipe Review @ Boot Daily
- NVIDIA Low Budget 7300 GT vs 8500 GT Comparison @ Madshrimps
- Gainward BLISS 8600 GTS 256MB GS Edition Review @ MVKTech
- NVIDIA GeForce 7050 @ Phoronix
- Matrox DualHead2Go Digital Edition @ techPowerUp
- PCSTATS Maximum Videocard Overclocking Chart
- Arctic Cooling Accelero S2 GPU cooler review @ Elite Bastards
- A Brief Introduction to GPGPU @ HWUpgrade
- HIS ICEQ3 Radeon X1950 Pro 256Meg PCI Express Videocard Review @ Tweaknews
- ATI X2400 – NV 8400 Roundup @ DH
- Sapphire Radeon HD 2600 XT 256MB GDDR4 @ Hardware Zone
Room for improvement
With the disappointing launch of the 2900XT a few driver revisions behind us, [H]ard|OCP revisits the card to see what improvements have been made, and if it can start to challenge the 8800 series. They set up a Crossfire rig to benchmark against a single 8800 GTS OC. With the falling price of overclocked 8800’s, can the Crossfire setup and new drivers make the 2900XT the better choice?