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Zotac nVidia GeForce GTX 275 Amp! Edition Review

Author Edward Chester
Published 3rd Apr 2009
Manufacturer Zotac
Supplier Overclockers.co.uk
Price £219.99 (Exc VAT)
as reviewed £252.99 (Inc VAT)
Latest Price Click here
Features Score 7 for Features
Performance Score 7 for Performance
Value Score 8 for Value
Overall Score 8 for Overall
Zotac nVidia GeForce GTX 275 Amp! Edition
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There was little difference in power consumption when running this Zotac card at default clock speeds and underclocked reference speeds, so we've recorded a single figure for them both. We take the reading from a wall socket reader that checks the complete system power.


Clearly, nVidia's hard work to massively reduce idle power consumption for the original 200 series chips hasn't been undone with this latest incarnation. Bearing in mind our earlier observations that the GTX 275 also runs quieter than the HD 4890 when idling, it's a clear choice which way to go if you tend to leave your PC on for long periods of time. While this trend is reversed when the cards are under load, the difference is much less so wouldn't sway our decision either way.

As well as underclocking this Zotac card we also had a go at overclocking it further and had a little bit of success. In fact, we pushed the core clock to 721MHz without too much trouble, making for a total overclock of 88MHz (over default speeds). This works out as a 14 per cent increase, which is near enough the 15 per cent (850MHz to 975MHz) we achieved with the HD 4890.


Verdict

On the evidence we've gleaned, both the nVidia GeForce GTX 275 and the AMD ATI Radeon HD 4890 hold a clear advantage over what came before and are great value products, whichever you choose. As for which of the two to go for, that's less clear cut.

If you tend to leave your computer on for long periods of time when not gaming, you may appreciate the lower idle power of the GTX 275. Likewise, the wider software support for CUDA, over ATI Stream, may attract you to side with nVidia, especially if you work with video a lot - be it editing or trans/encoding. However, based on the games we've tested, ATI has the faster gaming card overall and for us that's still the most important consideration.

 

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Latest 4 of 18 Comments

Have your say: Leave a comment below about this article.

comment ECH said on 5th April 2009

I wanted to also add that this is the only review I found so far that actually used a retail GTX 275. The performance of this retail card is no where as high as I found in other r... more

comment john said on 5th April 2009

@ECH

No. I think we both have the same point directed to different directions.
In case you don't know, The adaptive aa is more demanding and effective th... more

comment ECH said on 6th April 2009

John,

I believe we are in agreement but pointing out different aspects of the review. Yes, we know that Adative AA is better but can take a hit in performance as we... more

comment ECH said on 6th April 2009

Correction:

...For example, at 8xAA, MSAA uses 1 texture/shader sample, 8 stored color/z/ctencil
samples and 8 coverage samples. With CSAA 8xAA uses 1 texture... more

See all 18 comments on this article.

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