PNY 9600 GT OC XLR8 review
Verdict
Decent performance, but not enough gain over a standard 9600 GT to justify the price increase
Review Date: 13 Jun 2008
Reviewed By: Mike Jennings
Price when reviewed:
PNY is a relative newcomer to the overclocking game, and we found its first outing - the "XLR8 OC"-branded 9800 GTX - a disappointing start. Now the company has produced an overclocked version of the A-Listed 9600 GT card (click for our review of the standard 9600 GT).
As with the 9800 GTX, PNY has boosted the 9600 GT's core clock speed by 50MHz, here going up from 650MHz to 700MHz. The memory clock has gone up too, from 1.8GHz to 1.9Ghz.
The amount and type of memory is, however, unchanged from the reference design - you still get 512MB of GDDR3. Memory bandwidth increases from a stock 57.6GB/s to 60.8GB.
These are small changes, and, unsurprisingly, the performance improvements we saw were minor. In our low-quality Crysis benchmark - an elementary test for such a powerful card - the XLR8 clocked 141fps, compared to 134fps from the standard 9600 GT.
When we turned up the quality to medium settings, the gap narrowed further, with the XLR8 scoring 53fps against a stock card's 51fps. In our high performance test, we saw no advantage at all, with both cards scoring 22fps.
Results in Call of Duty 4 followed a similar trend. In the medium quality test, the overclocked card hit 94fps, compared to 83fps from a standard card. But in our high test, the cards performed at virtually the same level, with the XLR8 achieving 51fps against a standard card's 49fps.
The 9600 GT is a decent GPU, and overclocking naturally improves performance. But the XLR8 delivers disappointingly small benefits in modern games. It's difficult to recommend it when a reference card can achieve such similar performance at lower cost.
Author: Mike Jennings
From around the web
advertisement
- LinkedIn revenue doubles as membership soars
- Kodak kills off cameras
- UK broadband project spending £1m on legal fees
- Microsoft: Windows on ARM won't be sold separately
- Intel pays five hours of profits to settle antitrust case
- Windows 8 on ARM to run desktop apps... but only Office
- Ofcom dithers over plans to tackle broadband slamming
- Data boost bolsters Vodafone revenue
- Google working on cloud storage system
- Lenovo's profit leaps 54% on market gains
- Chrome's shine getting lost in translation
- BytePac: the cardboard hard disk enclosure
- How tech loosens our grip on reality
- Hokum watch: Safer Internet Day
- Why I'm deleting Adobe from my PC
- Prepare to be patronised: it's Safer Internet Day
- Dear Sony, Samsung and every other tech company in the world: stop trying to be Apple
- Will Apple's Final Cut Pro X update placate the pros?
- Smartr Contacts for iPhone review
- Switching to Office 365's Outlook Web App
- The ultimate guide to passwords
- How Apple lulls Mac owners into a false sense of security
- Privacy - outdated luxury or public necessity?
- Building the bionic man
- The making of open-source software
- Top 10 stupid security stories of 2011
- 10 techs to watch in 2012
- PC Pro's favourite tech products of 2011
- 10 most read articles on PC Pro in 2011
- 50 ways to make your PC better
- Why virtualisation hasn't slowed the growth of data
- How to make Google AdWords work for your business
- The curse of sloppily written software
- Paying for your crimes with Bitcoin
- Behind the scenes: tech support for Formula 1
- The security risk of fat fingers
- Why Windows Phone 7 isn't quite ready for business
- When will Microsoft stop fiddling with Windows 8?
- Flash down the pan?
- Metro Style apps vs desktop applications
advertisement






