Product Details
eVGA e-GeForce 8800 GTS Superclocked Graphics Card

eVGA e-GeForce 8800 GTS Superclocked Graphics Card
From EVGA

Price:

Currently unavailable.


Average customer review:

Product Description

The e-GeForce 8800 GTS from EVGA brings you the latest in graphics card technology from Nvidia. Engineered for the enthusiast your system will be able to handle the latest games, high definition digital video, and Windows Vista with aplomb. The features of the 8800 GTS SUPERCLOCKED 640-P2-N825-AR include the 320-bit GeForce 8800 GTS(576MHz clock) chipset, 640MB of 320-bit 1.2 nanosecond GDDR3 memory with a 850 MHZ clock with an effective rate of 1700 MHZ, 1.35 GHz Shader Clock, 96 stream processors, PCI Express x16 compatibility, integrated NVIDIA TV encoder with HDTV, S-VIdeo, and Composite outputs, Dual DVI-I connectors, 64 GB per second memory bandwidth, NVIDIA unified architecture with GigaThread technology, Full Microsoft DirectX 10 and Shader Model 4.0 support, NVIDIA SLI ready, 16x full-screen anti-aliasing, True 128-bit floating point hgh dynamic-range HDR lighting, NVIDIA Quantum Effects physics processing technology, NVIDIA PureVideo technology, OPEN GL 2.0 support, and NVIDIA ForceWare Unified Driver architecture. This product comes with a lifetime warranty. Product must be registered at www.evga.com within 30 days of purchase to get the lifetime warranty.


Product Details

  • Brand: EVGA
  • Model: 640-P2-N825-AR
  • Dimensions: 9.50" h x 2.88" w x 13.00" l, 2.20 pounds

Features

  • PCI Express x-16
  • 320-bit GeForce 8800 GTS with 576MHz clock
  • 640MB 320-bit 1.2 ns GDDR3 memory
  • 850 MHz clock/1700MHz effective memory rate
  • Direct X 10.0, Shader Model 4.0, Dual DVI and HDTV support

Editorial Reviews

From the Manufacturer

Key Features:

NVIDIA SLI Technology
Dramatically scales performance by allowing two graphics cards to be run in parallel. Only available on select PCI-Express models.

Other Features:

NVIDIA PureVideo Technology
The combination of the GeForce 6 Series GPU's high-definition video processor and NVIDIA video decode software delivers unprecedented HD video, stunning picture clarity, smooth video, accurate color, and precise image scaling for all video content to turn your PC into a high-end home theater.

High-Speed GDDR3 Memory Interface
Support for the world’s fastest GDDR3 memory delivers fluid frame rates for even the most advanced games and applications.

OpenGL 2.0 Optimizations and Support
Ensures top-notch compatibility and performance for all OpenGL applications

Dual Dual-Link TMDS Connector
For a dual link TMDS, which is in essence two TMDS links bonded together, can display at resolutions up to 2048 x 1536--and is the connector of choice for users of extremely large digital flat panels.


Customer Reviews

Wow, a must have for gamers5
This video card is expensive, but it is worth the price. Games like doom3, Quake4, Bioshock look so beutifull it will blow your mind, and if you work with open gl in 3d this video card has all you need for it. So if you have the money go for it.

Evga 8800 GTS5
To the guy below "homebrewed". Don't bother with a third card as it won't help you. I have a single 320 MB version of this card, and run MS FS 2004 butter smooth. I also run MS FSX, also very well. Instead, I would look into the rest of the system-processor, motherboard, etc. I run Intel Core2Duo E8500 3.16 GHz on an Asus P5E3 Premium WIFI with 4GB of Corsair DDR3 1600 MHz RAM. Check-out my 2 reviews at MS FSX Deluxe @ NewEgg. Goose

Supposedly a great card...4
I have two of these in SLi. I play FS2004 (an old and simple game by today's standards) on a machine with a Phenom 9500 and 4Gb of G.Skill 800MHz RAM. When cycling thorough the four views in the game, I get a lag in the painting of the screen. For instance, the instrument panel in the virtual cockpit of an airliner like a 747 will take a second or so to fully "paint in." This bugs me. I paid the bucks for two of these cards to banish slow or lagging screenpaints, and they persist. My next thrust will be to buy a third and go with a mobo that will handle that many. I'd say look around for something better. I'm stuck with the two and have to buy a third because all three cards must match for a three-card, SLi set-up...