Monday, February 8, 2010

Front Bay Sound Card Nvidia 8800 GTS?

Nvidia 8800 GTS? - front bay sound card

I have a Dell XPS Gen 5 Specs: P4 HT 3.4 GHz, 1 GB DDR2 RAM, 250GB HD, dual layer DVD burner, DVD, multimedia interface, Front Bay Card Reader Sound Blaster Audigy 2 ZS, 256MB NVIDIA 6800 GTOC Power Supply 460 Watt, which was looking to get an NVIDIA 8800 GTS 640MB or 320MB's, Dell, their own parties and not what we all know it is difficult to update something important in it, my question is this team able to handle the graphics card, I will continue to 3 GB of DDR2 RAM, please note the opinions thank you again

4 comments:

mysticma... said...

There are only two areas that we are in determining if you will run a video card, connect the video card and power supply. You have a PCI Express slot, so no problem. The second is the power supply. The 8800GTS recommends a minimum of 450 watts, so you should be OK, but for sure I recommend you get one of the standard clock 8800GTSs, not an overclocked version. Replacing the power is not going to be this tension XPS in a strange way, therefore, not replaced.

Mac Pro said...

The most powerful GPU No Dell XPS system can operate is 512 MB NVIDIA GeForce Go 7950 GTX, which is pretty impressive.

In addition, the system type. I think the XPS 1710 m is the handle 512MB NVIDIA GeForce Go 7950 GTX.


Updated: lol> You got me. Sorry, brotha.

Yes, it supports the video card, then ... LOL you know, laptops are limited ... It's all good. I never knew it was a computer. XPS Gen I thought was a laptop. At least I've learned.
Stay Cool.

mike v said...

Your team is a card. While Nvidia is on his time. There are no games, the performance I suggest you wait until prices must fall. Unless you are very rich. The map of 6800 with its fast processor and memory should run well every game. Graphics can be as good.

Brett D said...

Yes and no processor and RAM and hard drive are in order. But I think the 460watt power supply cut off short-term map. It drains a lot of energy. I recommend at least 550, but it's just me. I have a 600Watt PSU and SLI works perfectly. Make sure that your mother has a PCI-E.

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