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Test Setup and Methodology:
While playing with shiny new video cards is
always fun, I must admit one thing that has taken the wind out of my
sails is the dearth of games that can really push these new graphics
cards. It seems that the game that has best eye-candy is
still Crysis:Warhead, released over a year ago. I can
only hope that Windows 7 and DirectX 11 is going to be the impetus
needed to push us into the next generation of gaming. I guess
we will have to keep waiting for those future PC gaming
blockbusters like Battlefield 3 and Crysis 2 to really push these
setups.
As such, our benchmark suite has not changed
much, and include the following:
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Crysis: Warhead
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X3: Terran Conflict
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Stalker: Clear Skies
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Unigine Tropics
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3DMark06
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3DMark Vantage
Our test bed, however, has made some changes to
keep up with the times. First up, Windows Vista has been
replaced with Windows 7 Ultimate 64-bit, and instead of our usual
RAID-0 array of Raptor Xs, we have replaced those with a four way
RAID-0 of 50GB SLC SSDs.
| CPU: |
Intel i7 920 @ 4.07GHz |
| Motherboard: |
Gigabyte GA-EX58-EXTREME |
| GPU: |
Sapphire HD 4890 Vapor-X 2GB
Sapphire HD 5770 1GB |
| RAM: |
6GB of Crucial Ballistix Tracer 1600,
8-8-8-24 2T |
| Case: |
Danger Den Torture Rack |
| Sound: |
Creative Labs X-Fi XtremeMusic |
| Cooling: |
Apogee GTZ, MCR320 |
| Hard Drives: |
1x1500GB
Seagate Barracuda
4x50GB SLC SSD RAID-0 |
| PSU: |
Corsair 1000HX |
I also decided to use the 2GB variant of the 4890
as a comparison tool, primarily because we saw that the 2GB had a
definite performance impact on Crysis:Warhead at 2560x1600, and I
wanted to see how that would translate against the new generation
card. The 4890 was tested at reference clocks of 850MHz on the
core and 975MHz on memory. Now, onto the testing!

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