Gigabyte GV-N66256DP Fanless Graphics Card
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Maybe, but we only got this a month or two ago... and it may still be a viable option for lots of silencers. Better late than never?Aris wrote:isnt a vanilla 6600 a little dated to be reviewd? nvidia just released a passive single slot 7600gs' for $150 USD. not that it wasnt a good review, its just about a year late or so.
Besides, it gave us reason to set up a noise/power-focused vidcard test platform.
$150 won't get you far with those, if you happen to have an AGP-only system - whereas passive 6600 AGP gives you a nice quiet VGA with hardware HD (MPEG-2, WMV, H.264) decode acceleration. As the review stated, the more likely market for these is home theater, not gaming.Aris wrote:isnt a vanilla 6600 a little dated to be reviewd? nvidia just released a passive single slot 7600gs' for $150 USD.
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Thanks for this review.
This card might seem old to some for gaming, but for HTPC use it is still very capable -- IMHO it remains the best option for an AGP system if silence and high quality video playback are primary concerns. (The 6600 and 6600 GT have the broadest PureVideo feature-set among AGP offerings, on par with the newer 7800GS).
However, I REALLY WISH that Zalman and/or Gigabyte would offer this heatpipe as a separate product for those of us looking to silence our fan-equipped 6600/GTs. Unfortunately, the ZM80 does not support mounting on the AGP 6600 GT (it can be done but is far from elegant and requires a lot of room in the case) and unless I'm wrong, there are no 3rd party heatpipe designs that support the AGP versions of these cards, due to the peculiar board layout with the HSI chip. Too bad because they are otherwise perfect for HTPCs.
This card might seem old to some for gaming, but for HTPC use it is still very capable -- IMHO it remains the best option for an AGP system if silence and high quality video playback are primary concerns. (The 6600 and 6600 GT have the broadest PureVideo feature-set among AGP offerings, on par with the newer 7800GS).
However, I REALLY WISH that Zalman and/or Gigabyte would offer this heatpipe as a separate product for those of us looking to silence our fan-equipped 6600/GTs. Unfortunately, the ZM80 does not support mounting on the AGP 6600 GT (it can be done but is far from elegant and requires a lot of room in the case) and unless I'm wrong, there are no 3rd party heatpipe designs that support the AGP versions of these cards, due to the peculiar board layout with the HSI chip. Too bad because they are otherwise perfect for HTPCs.
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Yes, that is correct. The small heatsink is for the PCIe-AGP conversion chip. Main heatsink covers GPU + memory. At least for my AGP 6600GT card(I took it apart to see:)) N66T128VP I think.cAPSLOCK wrote:In page two of the arcticle you say that the small heatsink is for the GPU, and the large heatsinks are for the board... I think that the big ones are for the GPU (and perhaps memory) while the small one is for the HSI chip or whatever you call it (PCIe->AGP conversion).
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I owned the model being reviewed here and was very impressed with the image quality of MPEG2 footage when using the nVidia PureVideo decoder.crabnebula wrote:This card might seem old to some for gaming, but for HTPC use it is still very capable -- IMHO it remains the best option for an AGP system if silence and high quality video playback are primary concerns. (The 6600 and 6600 GT have the broadest PureVideo feature-set among AGP offerings, on par with the newer 7800GS).
If you are only interested in viewing SD video footage, the GeForce 6200 AGP has nearly all the same PureVideo SD features implemented as the 6600, but is considerably cheaper and probably more frugal in the power department. The 6200 is very limited in its support of PureVideo HD video processing features though.
N.B.
I measured the power draw at idle of the reviewed Gigabyte 6600 as being 10W more than a 128MB FX5200.
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Gigabyte X1600XT = GV-RX16T256V-RH
Look here then. Mmmm, sexy...mattthemuppet wrote:nice review - shame it wasn't one of those Gigabyte cards with the new Silentpipe2 HS though, I'm really interested to see how it stacks up.
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Wonder where you got that link from Firetech
Good review, the Real Time HDR works nice, but takes away CPUburn cycles, which explains the lower CPU temp.
anyway here's another 6-Way passive vga card roundup
Good review, the Real Time HDR works nice, but takes away CPUburn cycles, which explains the lower CPU temp.
anyway here's another 6-Way passive vga card roundup
Temp monitoring
Hey all,
I have this card just found out that you can use RivaTuner 2.0 RC 15.8 to monitor the GPU temp. I had always heard that this could not be done, so I was very happy to find out that it can be done. Mine is Idling around 57 C in my 38 C case. It hit 71 in the aquamark3 benchmark. Just an FYI
-Dave
I have this card just found out that you can use RivaTuner 2.0 RC 15.8 to monitor the GPU temp. I had always heard that this could not be done, so I was very happy to find out that it can be done. Mine is Idling around 57 C in my 38 C case. It hit 71 in the aquamark3 benchmark. Just an FYI
-Dave
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Here's where I got mine.Captain Spaulding wrote:I am unable to find this card for sale anywhere in the US. Does anybody know where it is in stock?
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Felger Carbon wrote:"DVI Openbox"? Openbox??Ralf Hutter wrote:Here's where I got mine.
A bit further down the page, someone very helpfully wrote:Open-box; May not include full accessories (i.e.: driver, cable, manual, fan, software, etc.)
HDMI decoding huh? care to explain what that is?vitaminc wrote:IMO the design of this card is inline with its peers (silient pipe stuff). However the GPU isn't worth it to be reviewed due to its out dated specs. It doesn't even do decent Pure Video HDMI decoding.
PureVideo works on the 6600 series.
correct, also, on some cards (like mine, eVGA 6600gt agp) i had to hack the BIOS bin to enable the temp monitoring within the driver.I have this card just found out that you can use RivaTuner 2.0 RC 15.8 to monitor the GPU temp. I had always heard that this could not be done
Where to find...
Well, I got mine off of E-bay. They had "end users" selling them, along with e-bay e-tailers. I did end up having a problem with mine, so I RMA'd it back to Gigabite. It was still under its 3 year warrenty The one I got back from them works great.
-Dave
-Dave
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