Home

News

Forums

Hardware

CPUs

Motherboards

Video

Guides

CPU Prices

RAM Prices

Compare Prices



Sharky Extreme : Video cards August 27, 2010





Be a Marketplace Partner








 Advertising Info

About the Double-Underlined Links



 - Most Active Threads
 - Technical Support
 - CPUs & Overclocking



Latest News


- AMD Unleashes Six-Core Desktop CPU
- WD Doubles Capacity of Fastest SATA Drive
- Nvidia Announces Blazing GeForce GTX 480, 470 GPUs
- SanDisk's SSD As Rapid As It Is Reliable
- OCZ Launches Limited-Edition SSD
News Archives

Features

- SharkyExtreme.com: Interview with Microsoft's Dan Odell
- SharkyExtreme.com: Interview with ATI's Terry Makedon
- SharkyExtreme.com: Interview with Seagate's Joni Clark
- Half-Life 2 Review
- DOOM 3 Review

Buyer's Guides

- February High-end Gaming PC Buyer's Guide
- November Value Gaming PC Buyer's Guide
- September Extreme Gaming PC Buyer's Guide

HARDWARE

  • CPUs


  • Motherboards


  • Video Cards


    internet.commerce
    Be a Commerce Partner














    internet.com
    IT
    Developer
    Internet News
    Small Business
    Personal Technology

    Search internet.com
    Advertise
    Corporate Info
    Newsletters
    Tech Jobs
    E-mail Offers



  •   


    ATI Radeon 9800 Pro Review
    By Vince Freeman :  March 6, 2003

    Introduction

    ATI has been on an unprecedented run of late, and everything the company touches seems to turn to gold. The Radeon 9700 Pro remains a top-end pick for performance gaming, the Radeon 9500 Pro is a super mid-range product, and ATI stands alone with the exceptional All-in-Wonder Radeon 9700 Pro, which combines 3D power with all the multimedia bells and whistles. Even their much-maligned driver program has been rejuvenated under the Catalyst brand name, and has helped ATI immensely in this area.

    There have been many rumors swirling concerning ATI's future plans, most specifically the R350 core and exactly how far this will extend their performance advantage. A 0.13-micron core, enhanced features, ultra-fast core speeds, DDR-II memory and other specifications have been making the rounds since news of the R350 cards first leaked out. Some of these may have been a bit premature, and ATI's Radeon 9800 Pro is simply more of the same, only faster, with enhanced features and software support. As you'll see in the benchmark section, this by no means a backhanded compliment.

    The New ATI Cards

    In addition to the Radeon 9800 Pro we'll be reviewing, ATI also announced two other products that will be filling the mid-range and entry-level sectors. Of course, the Radeon 9800-based cards are the big news, as these are expected to replace the current Radeon 9700 brand for the enthusiast and performance markets. These will ship in three distinct configurations: the Radeon 9800 Pro ($399) and the Radeon 9800 (lower clock speed - $349) 128-MB boards are due in March, while a special 256-MB version of the Radeon 9800 Pro will debut in April.

    For the mid-range buyer, ATI offers two new models: the Radeon 9600 Pro and the standard Radeon 9600. These cards are positioned to replace the current Radeon 9500-based products with the mainstream market, with a real shift in architecture and design. The Radeon 9500 Pro shared the same core as the Radeon 9700 cards, but the new Radeon 9600 cards feature a quad-pipe RV350 core, and will be ATI's first on 0.13-micron.

    Due to this architectural shift, which looks very similar to the old Radeon 8500/7500 hierarchy, the clock speeds will be 400 MHz core/600 MHz DDR memory for the Radeon 9600 Pro, and 325 MHz core/400 MHz DDR memory for the Radeon 9600. The Radeon 9600 Pro ($169-$199) and Radeon 9600 ($149-$169) cards will begin shipping in April.

    At the entry level, ATI will be introducing the Radeon 9200, which replaces the Radeon 9000 for the entry-level, and should hit the street in the price range of $79-$149 - depending on the memory (64-MB/128-MB) and Radeon 9200 Pro/Radeon 9200 configurations. This looks to be an AGP 8X revision of the Radeon 9000 Pro, but we'll have to wait and see exactly what ATI has in mind.


  • Page 1 Introduction
    Page 2 The ATI Radeon 9800 Pro Card
    Page 3 Performance and Test System
    Page 4 Quake 3, Serious Sam 2 & RtCW Performance
    Page 5 Jedi Knight II, Comanche 4 & UT 2003 Performance
    Page 6 Code Creatures and 3DMark 2001SE Pro Performance
    Page 7 UT 2003 Anti-aliasing & Anisotropic Filtering Performance
    Page 8 Anti-aliasing & Anisotropic Filtering Performance: Part 2
    Page 9 Benchmark Analysis and Conclusion


    Copyright(c) 2010 QuinStreet Inc. All Rights Reserved. Legal Notices | Licensing , Reprints , & Permissions | Privacy Policy