86
EVGA GeForce GTX 260
$170.00
Released June, 2008
The Pros:Can manage well on a 500W power supply, don't need anything huge. Idles cool and quiet when not being pushed, won't hear anything from the fans at all on normal day-to-day operation. Capable of running modern games at high settings smoothly.
The Cons:Very large size, need to ensure there's room in the case.
The EVGA GeForce GTX 260 series contains 5 cards. All of the cards contain the stock specification 896MB of DDR3 VRAM connected through a 448bit bus. All but one utilize the stock cooler, and all but one are overclocked from the stock timings of 576MHz/1998MHz.
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For more information on the GTX 260 refer to the full report.
Models
EVGA GeForce GTX 260 896MB: A 896MB dual slot card, stock cooler, at stock clockspeeds(576MHz/1998MHz)
EVGA GeForce GTX 260 SC: A 896MB dual slot card, stock cooler, at slightly enhanced clockspeeds(602MHz/2025MHz)
EVGA GeForce GTX 260 SSC: A 896MB dual slot card, stock cooler, at enhanced clockspeeds(626MHz/2106MHz)
EVGA GeForce GTX 260 FTW: A 896MB dual slot card, stock cooler, at enhanced clockspeeds(666MHz/2214MHz )
EVGA GeForce GTX 260 HC: A 896MB dual slot card, enhanced EVGA desgined water cooler, at enhanced clockspeeds(684MHz/2214MHz)
User Reviews (1)
Pros & Cons
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1
can manage well on a 500W power supply, don't need anything huge
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1
idles cool and quiet when not being pushed, won't hear anything from the fans at all on normal day-to-day operation
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1
capable of running modern games at high settings smoothly
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1
plays HD movies smoothly and can handle fast-moving action without blur
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1
fully compatible with SLI setups for a future processing power boost
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1
nice range of flexibility for overclocking
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1
very large size, need to ensure there's room in the case
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