| GeForce 7600 GT | |
|---|---|
| Codename: | G73 |
| Process: | 90nm |
| Pixel Shaders: | 12 |
| Vertex Shaders: | 5 |
| Texture Units: | 12 |
| ROPs: | 8 |
| Memory Bus: | 128-bit |
| Core Speed MHz: | 560 |
| Memory Speed MHz: | 700 (1400 effective) |
The 7600 GT is an amazing card in this price range, sporting new SM 3.0 technology and very high clock speeds to deliver excellent performance. Its weakest feature is its 128-bit memory bus, but its high memory speeds offset that disadvantage and make it competitive with 256-bit cards like the X800 XT/X850 XT and even the 7800 GS.
With prices of the X1650 XT AGP staying at $160 and more, the 7600 GT AGP becomes the lone recommendation in this segment.
Best AGP Card For ~$180
| Radeon X1950 PRO | |
|---|---|
| Codename: | RV570 |
| Process: | 90nm |
| Pixel Shaders: | 36 |
| Vertex Shaders: | 8 |
| Texture Units: | 12 |
| ROPs: | 12 |
| Memory Bus: | 256-bit |
| Core Speed MHz: | 575 |
| Memory Speed MHz: | 690 (1380 effective) |
The X1950 PRO is similar to the X1900 GT, the main difference being that it is not based on the X1900 XT, but a whole new and less power-hungry core. The card's main competition is the 7900 GS, which it beats in almost every benchmark.
The X1950 PRO is a powerful card that will make AGP gaming viable for at least a year or two more, and these cards are becoming easier to find online. This is a great last stand for the AGPer.
Best AGP Card For ~$260
| Radeon X1950 XT (by Gecube) | |
|---|---|
| Codename: | R580 |
| Process: | 90nm |
| Pixel Shaders: | 48 |
| Vertex Shaders: | 8 |
| Texture Units: | 16 |
| ROPs: | 16 |
| Memory Bus: | 256-bit |
| Core Speed MHz: | 628 |
| Memory Speed MHz: | 700 (1400 effective) |
The X1950 XT - manufactured exclusively by Gecube - is, put simply, the most powerful card ever to grace the AGP bus. This card has no direct competition; in fact, its closest competitor is its X1950 PRO AGP sibling, which is much less powerful.
At $260, it is a bit of a tough pill to swallow for a dying interface. I would only recommend the X1950 XT AGP to someone with a very fast AGP system who already has a power supply with enough juice to handle the X1950 XT.
It must be noted, however, that if you have $260 to spend on an AGP card - and possibly an extra $100 for a power supply that can handle it - you may be much better off purchasing a PCI-express motherboard, CPU and PCI-Express graphics card.
PCI-Express graphics cards are cheaper than their AGP cousins. If you upgrade your system to PCI-Express and sell your old components, you may actually spend a similar amount of money compared to buying an expensive AGP card alone.
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