About
a month ago we reviewed the Sapphire AGP version
of the X1950Pro. The focus of the review was on
how well the card compared to a PCI-E version
of the same card. The results were surprising
as there was literally no difference between the
two bus types. This time around we'll be focusing
more on how far we can actually push the AGP card.
While 1600x1200 is enough for most, it can't hurt
to see if an AGP card can handle a game running
at 1920x1200. After all, one of the main arguments
against AGP is the (so called) limited bandwidth.
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If
you take a look at the CCC picture above you might
notice that something is missing. Indeed, the
Overdrive tab is nowhere to be seen. We were surprised
by this, as every X1950Pro card we tested so far
(both AGP and PCI-E) had the Overdrive tab enabled.
While there are other ways of raising the GPU
frequency it would have certainly be nice to be
able to do it the “legal” way. The
sample board we reviewed housed 256Mb of GDDR3
memory, which could prove a problem with high
resolutions and AA being used at the same time,
not to speak about the high-res textures some
of the latest games use. Other than the above
mentioned differences the card is the same as
the Sapphire board we reviewed, with the GPU running
at 580Mhz and the memory ticking away at 689Mhz.
As
the above picture clearly shows, the cooler installed
on the card is made from copper. The back of the
packaging states that the cooler is a state-of-the-art
single slot, low noise cooling solution. While
this may sound like something a “suit and
tie” may come up with, it is actually very
close to the truth. The cooler is almost inaudible
and taking up only one slot (the AGP one obviously)
makes it perfect for cases where space is in short
supply. Although first impressions can be deceiving
the initial impression we got was extremely positive.
We
were surprised when we noticed that the card doesn't
use two molex connectors but instead relies on
a standard PCI-E power connector. Thinking it
through we can see this a smart design decision,
as most PSU's released in the recent years have
a PCI-E power cable so it might as well be used.
Users with older power supplies can alternatively
use the included molex to PCI-E converter which
requires two free molex connectors.
The
output connectors on the card are standard fare,
that being two dual-DVI connectors and a HDCP
capable TV-out plug. As expected for an X1K series
card it supports AVIVO which enables it to accelerate
video decoding.
The
box art on this package is one of the best we
have ever seen. It just screams “high performance”.
Unfortunately the contents are rather disappointing.
Besides the card you only get a 3 page quick-setup
booklet, the driver CD, one (!) DVI-to-VGA converter,
a component cable and the molex-to-PCI-E converter.
All in all you won't really miss anything, but
getting a few extras would have been nice.