Hopefully I can upgrade it or I will be faced with a a new comp. build. Any help will be much appreciated. Went to a few google sites but am not getting good answers so I'm here where the experts are (shameless suk up comment )
edit ...Mother board is ASUS P5Q Deluxe
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That is more like it. Honestly a Radeon 7800 series is probably in the ballpark of the minimum specifications already. I might recommend a wait and see approach before you spend money on a new card.
It is also worth considering that all the next generation cards are expected to drop in the next few months (expected by summer/fall). And for reals this time, because the 16nm silicon is finally in production after being stuck on 28nm for the last 4 years.
Otherwise I'd say a Radeon R9 380 or 380X for a good future proofing AMD card, though keep in mind these cards are hot and power hungry, nothing your 750w can't handle but depending on how well vented your system is they could make things get noisy.
Krom, thanks for taking the time to reply. Guess I'll wait a bit as the game I was interested in (No Man's Sky) won't be out for abit. when the 14-16 nm cards come out I'll see how much the other cards drop in price.
Liberal speak: "Convenience for you means control for him, free and the price is astronomical, you're the product for sale". Neil Oliver
Leftist are Evil, and Liberals keep voting for them. Dennis Prager
A mouse might be in a cookie jar.... but he is not a cookie" ... Casper Ten Boom
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Bringing this topic back up. AMD has just come out with the RX 480, a 14 nm card in the 200.00 range. I'm not interested in the fact the card is vr rated, just powering graphics a lot better than my 7870. A link here on it's qualities:
Incredibly powerful gaming performance
Capable of playing games at 4K resolutions with high detail settings
Quiet, relatively cool, and easily overclocked
Cons
99 percent of gamers can't afford it
Liberal speak: "Convenience for you means control for him, free and the price is astronomical, you're the product for sale". Neil Oliver
Leftist are Evil, and Liberals keep voting for them. Dennis Prager
A mouse might be in a cookie jar.... but he is not a cookie" ... Casper Ten Boom
If your life revolves around the ability to have an abortion, what does that say about your life? Anonymous
The RX480 is a decent card, but there are a few issues worth keeping in mind.
The 8 GB version runs $240 minimum and it is frequently out of stock. Also, avoid the reference design at all costs. The reference design ships with a single 6 pin PCIe plug and as a result the card is known to overdraw current from the motherboard slot and has fried motherboards worth more than itself in the process, the fix from AMD reduces the cards performance in order to keep it closer to the safety specs. Custom designs usually go with an 8 pin power plug which gives the card plenty of breathing room (double the available current of a 6 pin) and completely eliminates the risk of damaging other components in the system. Although the downside is that the custom designs are all pushing $300 and for a bit less than that price you could shop around for a overclocked GTX 1060 6 GB (unfortunately also frequently out of stock) which will outperform the RX 480 at pretty much everything for less power, heat and noise.
Krom, once again thanks for reply. Glad you brought up the 6 pin reference card info. I was looking at the 8 gb card so I will wait a bit more. The GTX is a bit better but I'm loath to change the software from radeon to nividia. Seems I've had problems but that was a long time ago so maybe things are easier nowadays.
Liberal speak: "Convenience for you means control for him, free and the price is astronomical, you're the product for sale". Neil Oliver
Leftist are Evil, and Liberals keep voting for them. Dennis Prager
A mouse might be in a cookie jar.... but he is not a cookie" ... Casper Ten Boom
If your life revolves around the ability to have an abortion, what does that say about your life? Anonymous
Personally, I think that a even 6G GTX 1060 is a far better card. I even was able to install a 8G GTX 1070 into my 6 year old ASUS Rampage gene III motherboard powered by a Corsair 850 PS and running Win 7 without a hitch. No fuddling with the BIOS or anything. Unfortunately, it's a little pricier than the Sapphire 480, hence the GTX 1060 suggestion.
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It should be fine for a little while longer, the RX 480 isn't so powerful that it will stall out waiting for that CPU in most games. There may be exceptions but not many, and it would depend greatly on your monitor and its refresh rate.
Yeah, its a 60 Hz monitor at 1200p so I wouldn't worry about the CPU limit with that setup. Odds are either the GPU will limit most games, or you will bump into the monitors 60 Hz refresh rate before the CPU bottlenecks. CPU limits only really become relevant for high refresh rate gaming like on a 144 Hz monitor, and in most cases a RX 480 isn't going to be able to render that fast at that resolution in the first place.
One more monkey wrench. The card uses pci 3.0. My motherboard uses 2.0. Talking to the asus tech the 2.0 will choke the performance and there is no way to upgrade it. Looks like I will have to do more than replace the vid card or have to get a older vid card running 2.0. Darn.
Liberal speak: "Convenience for you means control for him, free and the price is astronomical, you're the product for sale". Neil Oliver
Leftist are Evil, and Liberals keep voting for them. Dennis Prager
A mouse might be in a cookie jar.... but he is not a cookie" ... Casper Ten Boom
If your life revolves around the ability to have an abortion, what does that say about your life? Anonymous
I've got my current PCI 3.0 GTX 1070 card plugged into my old PCI 2.0 motherboard slot and it hasn't been an issue. I mean, it's not a racehorse of a system like some gamers seem to crave, but I'm perfectly happy with the performance. I'm even running most of my new games with their settings nearly maxed out.
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It will be fine, 2.0 is plenty for a single card. Even 1.0 would be fine for 99% of the games out there.
Basically in an x16 slot, PCIe 2.0 gives you 8 GB/sec of usable bandwidth, while PCIe 3.0 will give you 16 GB/sec. The only time it would seriously get stressed is if your video card was out of memory which would cause it to start swapping textures in from the main system RAM, which is going to kill performance either way because even PCIe 3.0 x16 is nothing compared to the video cards onboard memory that can read at 224 GB/sec.