“So today’s product tested is the Inno3D GeForce 9800 GT Twin Turbo, that comes from the iChill range of their products.It has a dazzling Arctic Cooling (Accelero) based cooling solution, keeping the temperatures down, noise levels low … and to throw in a bone .. they overclocked it for you.”
Here are some more Graphics Card articles from around the web:
- Zotac GeForce 9600 GT DP – Ports for Every Occasion @ Hardware Zone
- XFX 9800GTX+ SLI @ Gamepyre
- ASUS EAH4870 TOP Radeon HD 4870 @ HotHardware
- Palit Radeon HD 4870 Sonic Dual Edition @ Techgage
- Sapphire HD4870 Toxic Review @ OCC
- Sapphire HD 4850 Dual Slot Fansink @ Bjorn3D
- Sapphire Radeon HD 4670 @ CPU3D
- Sapphire Radeon HD 3450 LP Review @ ASE Labs
- HIS and Sapphire Radeon HD 4850 Face Off @ HotHardware
- HIS HD 4850 IceQ 4 TurboX 512MB @ Overclock3D
- ATI Radeon HD 4670 @ Gamepyre
- MSI Radeon HD 4670 @ Tweaktown
- Gainward Radeon HD 4870 1GB Golden Sample Review @ DriverHeaven
- Sapphire HD 4670 @ Bjorn3D
- Sapphire Radeon HD 4870 TOXIC 512MB: a worthy upgrade? @ HEXUS
G92 isn’t dead yet
Why would you want to invest in a 9800 GT at this point? A few reasons come to mind, like running Folding@Home on it or using it as a PhysX accelerator instead of using it as your main graphics processor. Take the Inno3D GeForce 9800 GT Twin Turbo that Guru of 3D reviewed. For $150 you get a pre-overclocked card with an impressive Accelero cooling system that will let you push the card even further than Inno3D did. How does bumping the shader clock from 1512MHz to nearly 1900MHz strike you?