ATI Radeon X800 GTO Mini Roundup: Sapphire, Connect3D, and PowerColor
by Josh Venning on December 26, 2005 12:05 AM EST- Posted in
- GPUs
PowerColor Radeon X800 GTO 16
Or last card, The PowerColor Radeon X800 GTO 16, is a bit different than the other three. As the name denotes, this card actually comes with the pixel pipelines unlocked to 16 as opposed to the standard 12 of the GTO. This will obviously give the card a little more power, and we will be able to see the kinds of performance gains that can be had by having these 4 extra pipelines open on the GTO.
This card looks similar to the GTO2 and the Connect3D GTO, yet interestingly, there are quite a lot of small variations between all of these GTOs that we had to review. The Sapphire X800 GTO Ultimate is definitely the odd one out in terms of looks, but that's to be expected, given the fanless heat sink. With the other three, not only are there different designs on the HSFs, but none of the heat sinks are exactly alike in shape as you would see on a different line of cards. This is logically a product of the “recycled” nature of these cards, but as we have said many times in the past, it's not the looks that are important; it is what’s on the inside that counts.
As you can see, the PowerColor X800 GTO 16 has a more subtle heat sink design, which is simply shiny silver and the PowerColor logo along the bottom. The box is also silver with the name of the card in the center and a big, sparkly “16” in reference to its extra pipelines. There is a game called Pacific Fighters included in the software bundle, which we haven't played, but that's the only thing besides the standard hardware that is included with the card.
It's important to note that this is the only X800 GTO in this review that comes factory overclocked in the sense that it has 4 extra pixel pipelines compared to the others, but the engine and memory clock speeds of all of these cards are the same (400MHz/490Mhz). The only other big difference between the PowerColor GTO 16 and the other three is that it has two DVI ports instead of one. Now let’s take a look at how these cards perform.
Or last card, The PowerColor Radeon X800 GTO 16, is a bit different than the other three. As the name denotes, this card actually comes with the pixel pipelines unlocked to 16 as opposed to the standard 12 of the GTO. This will obviously give the card a little more power, and we will be able to see the kinds of performance gains that can be had by having these 4 extra pipelines open on the GTO.
This card looks similar to the GTO2 and the Connect3D GTO, yet interestingly, there are quite a lot of small variations between all of these GTOs that we had to review. The Sapphire X800 GTO Ultimate is definitely the odd one out in terms of looks, but that's to be expected, given the fanless heat sink. With the other three, not only are there different designs on the HSFs, but none of the heat sinks are exactly alike in shape as you would see on a different line of cards. This is logically a product of the “recycled” nature of these cards, but as we have said many times in the past, it's not the looks that are important; it is what’s on the inside that counts.
As you can see, the PowerColor X800 GTO 16 has a more subtle heat sink design, which is simply shiny silver and the PowerColor logo along the bottom. The box is also silver with the name of the card in the center and a big, sparkly “16” in reference to its extra pipelines. There is a game called Pacific Fighters included in the software bundle, which we haven't played, but that's the only thing besides the standard hardware that is included with the card.
It's important to note that this is the only X800 GTO in this review that comes factory overclocked in the sense that it has 4 extra pixel pipelines compared to the others, but the engine and memory clock speeds of all of these cards are the same (400MHz/490Mhz). The only other big difference between the PowerColor GTO 16 and the other three is that it has two DVI ports instead of one. Now let’s take a look at how these cards perform.
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Zax - Saturday, December 31, 2005 - link
I have a Fireblade edition gto..as mentioned, it TOTALLY smokes the others in overclocking!!The Fireblade edition should have been reviewed...NOT to ultimate version..
crusadersrealm - Wednesday, December 28, 2005 - link
Why bother writing a review if you aren't going to do the proper investigation. The GTO2 uses the same chip (R480) as the X850XT PE . A simple bios update enables the other 4 pipes....he calls it too risky though "technically" possibe. I guess the quality of the reviews at this site have gone to the pits.Sanctusx2 - Wednesday, December 28, 2005 - link
vertical-align:super:P
Jimmdean - Tuesday, December 27, 2005 - link
Personally, I feel the real strength of the x800GTO is its availability in AGP form.Since I'm still using AGP, the 6800GS isn't an option.
My Sapphire X800GTO AGP is highly overclockable, and definately the best card value I've ever gotten...
Jimmdean - Wednesday, December 28, 2005 - link
Well, looks like now there is 6800GS in AGP, my bad...Avalon - Tuesday, December 27, 2005 - link
My only problem is that they specifically mentioned unlocking in the article. It wasn't even just a single sentence afterthought, either, but it was several blurbs. Why mention it if you aren't going to try it?Did Anand mention the pencil mod for the DFI Ultra-D but not follow through? No! He pulled the HSF off the northbridge of his board and went and modded it, then reported it to us fellow users. That's the stuff I like to see.
BIOS flashing is hardly more dangerous than overclocking as to justify doing one but not the other.
Brian23 - Tuesday, December 27, 2005 - link
I have the X800 GTO2. It's a sweet card. It unlocked just fine to 16 pipelines, and it overclocks to similar speeds as a X850 XT PE. I didn't even need to replace the stock heatsink on it.Wesleyrpg - Tuesday, December 27, 2005 - link
Whats happened to Anandtech of late?Firstly the review is about 4 months too late! Then we get this guff about that bios modding/unlocking pipelines on your card is unsafe! Who cares! We come to this site to read about what happens when you mod and the performance increases/risks, not to read some lecture about how dangerous bios modding is!
So its safe for you guys to 'overclock' the cards, but it's not ok to mod the bios to unlock pipes? In my view, both are equally dangerous, it must of come down to sheer lazyness on your reviewers part!
C'mon guys, pull your finger out...
Beenthere - Monday, December 26, 2005 - link
The review was for folks looking for mid-level graphics cards to plug and play. Sure some folks want to overclock everything, but most PC users aren't willing to risk damage to their hardware with long term overclocking. And spare me the dribble about O/C'ing being 100% safe as I've done it for years. The reality is if there were zero risk in overclocking, then all hardware would be clocked to the max.Besides the really important part of any Mobo, video card or PSU review is how cool the box is that the hardware comes in. Ya gotta give these hardware mfgs. credit, they know the hormone crazed kids will get off on the cyborg bimbos on the front of the box, the pretty colors on the box, and the all important heatsink shape and fan color. How the product actually performs ain't all that important as long as makes the hormones flow...
Ya gotta Luv it !!!
BenSkywalker - Tuesday, December 27, 2005 - link
"The review was for folks looking for mid-level graphics cards to plug and play."6800GS out of the box, under $200 at NewEgg right now and smacks any board in this review silly. No matter how you look at it, this review was lacking giving the most credit possible to it. Flat out misleading is closer to what it appears.