| Max Screen Resolution | 2560 x 1600 |
|---|---|
| Memory Speed | 3608 MHz |
| Graphics Coprocessor | Nvidia GeForce |
| Chipset Brand | NVIDIA GeForce |
| Graphics Card Ram Size | 1 GB |
EVGA GeForce GTS 450 1024 MB GDDR5 PCI Express 2.0 2DVI/Mini-HDMI SLI Ready Graphics Card, 01G-P3-1351-KR
| Graphics Coprocessor | Nvidia GeForce |
| Brand | EVGA |
| Graphics Ram Size | 1 GB |
| GPU Clock Speed | 783 MHz |
| Video Output Interface | DVI, HDMI |
| Chipset Brand | NVIDIA GeForce |
| Graphics RAM Type | GDDR5 |
| Compatible Devices | Desktop |
| Display Resolution Maximum | 2560 x 1600 |
| Graphics Card Interface | PCI Express |
About this item
- GeForce GTS 450 with 783 MHz Core Clock
- PCI Express 2.0
- 1024 MB 128-bit GDDR5 Memory
- 3608 MHz Effective Memory Clock and 1566 MHz Shader Clock
- Microsoft DirectX 11 Support
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Product Description
3608 MHz Memory Clock - 2560 x 1600 - SLI - Fan Cooler - HDMI - DVI
Product information
Technical Details
| Brand | EVGA |
|---|---|
| Item model number | 01G-P3-1351-KR |
| Item Weight | 1.65 pounds |
| Product Dimensions | 12 x 1.97 x 8 inches |
| Item Dimensions LxWxH | 12 x 1.97 x 8 inches |
| Manufacturer | EVGA |
| Language | English |
| ASIN | B0052BX4LE |
| Is Discontinued By Manufacturer | No |
| Date First Available | May 24, 2011 |
Additional Information
| Customer Reviews |
3.9 out of 5 stars |
|---|
Warranty & Support
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Long review goes like this: The only negative thing to say is the PASSMARK performance numbers posted by this card for 2D are pretty bad, however, it seems that the reason for this is that Windows 7 has a new 2D rendering strategy wrt to RAM and video card memory that intersects in an unfortunate way the rather strange *NOT double buffered* PASSMARK 2D test.
About that test, I would say PASSMARK is a bit unrealistic in measuring unbuffered performance since all 2D programs use double buffering to blit their graphics to the screen (if I've lost you, then you can ignore what follows and just go find your credit card to buy this really excellent card). PASSMARK in this benchmark acts like programs use direct rendering to the screen, which is just not the case and hasn't been for a long time AFAIK.
But mostly, out of 100s of possible GDI functions which are available to be hardware accelerated on a video card, Windows 7 accelerates only six ! - BitBlt, ColorFill, StretchBlt, AlphaBlend, Cleartype fonts & TransparentBlt- a criminal state of affairs on the part of Microsoft and what is mostly respoonsible for the bad PASSMARK numbers- the CPU is doing all the heavy lifting and not the card! I have an very very very fast 8-core CPU and I can tell you, you're much better off having the CUDA cores on the video card doing the processing....
So if you're using Windows 7 and benchmarking with PASSMARK, virtually any card will give you very mediocre results in the PASSMARK 2D scoring category. My advice- ignore it, it may not mean what it appears to mean and there's nothing you can do about it anyway.
The 3D performance of this card is outstanding, especially given the very modest price- cards go to 800 bucks and more. The build of the card and connectors and even the packaging on the card are confidence inspiring; for instance the double DVI heads in the card are very sturdy and don't sag at all under the weighty DVI connectors and thick, sagging monitor cords attached to them. The card itself is housed in a fancy (to me) plastic housing and needs its own power supply from your MB. It has a fan built into the housing that keeps things nice and cool according to my temp sensors.
Really, this is a great purchase even for most gamers and if you're value shopping for a high end card, this is probably the best price-performance ratio you're going to find with 2 DVI heads.
One more thing is EVGA is an OUTSTANDING company to try to get support from. People love this company because of their after-purchase customer support. That was probably 80% of the reason I went with an EVGA card in the first place.
My verdict is- buy with confidence, you won't be disappointed unless you're looking for some level of performance that isn't to be had at the sub $350 dollar price point, in which case you know a lot more about graphics cards and what you need than I do and aren't likely to be reading the reviews on this card anyway.
Near the end of August 2016, the card that feeds the main and left monitors started putting out what I would describe as jittery text. Then, went to complete blackout.
I am the type who insists (to the rage of the people who fund my eccentricities) on having three monitors when I work on projects.
So.... from one of the machines in the proverbial scrap pile with a broken DVD drive, and fractured USB connections I found a rather large looking video card. It was an "EVGA GTS 450".
I pulled it and after removing the one good card along with it's bad behaving twin, put it in my system. After the usual going online and getting drivers, I tried using only two monitors. Other than the left one being blacked out, the main and right monitors got going and looked great. So, now the test......
I do a lot of video editing..... 1920x1080 at 30 or 60 frames per second. Was I impressed! Smooth play with no discernable frame dropping. I was wanting another one of these cards, but all the other cards I found there were lousy slow cards dating back to Windows XP days. Sure, text was fine, but try to put HD video on them...... stu---tt----er-----fra-----m-----e! Useless.
So I checked with a local computer parts supplier and since this part is over six months old, they did not have one in stock.
To Amazon and .... yes! Here they are... but..... $500 for one here, $400 for one there.
My whining to the powers the be went nowhere.... that is until I found one that was used for under $100 from an outfit called ElectroTechOutlet.
I had to make horrible promises to the lousy powers that be of what punishment I would incur if this part did not work out.
Well, after it arrived (a few days early I might add). It was nicely packed in a Priority Box wrapped in what appeared to be shrink wrap. It looked good enough to pass as new.
I put it in my system and fired it up, half expecting a pop with a puff of smoke. It worked! Well, it worked after my system stalled for time saying it was looking for drivers. Hell, I had already installed drivers for the other card (same brand and model), but you know computers like to torment us when they can. So I just sat there and waited for it to "find" the drivers. It did.
My system now runs better than it has ever before, and plays (and enables me to edit) HD video smooth as the first card.
Included was an VGI to VGA adapter (so someone could plug a VGA monitor cable to the card's VGI connector)
This ElectroTechOutlet was able to supply me the part I needed in short order for what was more than a fair price. I have no thoughts of hesitation purchasing from them again.
By the way, I usually leave my system on 24/7, and it hasn't missed a beat. I have good air flow in the case, so heat has not been a problem.
Thanks ElectroTechOutlet.
PROS: Power for the Price, I got this for $95 and I'm impressed by how many features a budget card can have. For me, a critical issue was that the card's PCI express 2.0 is compatible with my ancient motherboard's PCI express 1.0 x16 slot. Although thick, it is a short card: if it had been longer it would have caused headaches with installing all the hardware in my CM Storm Scout Case.
CONS: Here today, gone tomorrow. If you plan on using this in SLI config (probably the only way this GPU can handle higher settings in current gen games), you'd better buy both cards now; you will only be able to find pre-owned/ refurbished GTS 450s in 2013. I would have bought 2 if my build's mobo supported two:
ASUS P5VD2-MX SE mobo
Pentium E2160 @ 1.80GHz
NVIDIA GeForce GTS 450
Lite-On Blu-ray IHOS104-06
2x WD1002FAEX 1TB 7200 RPM
CORSAIR HX850 Watt
CM Storm Scout Case
Acer G276HL Dbd 27-Inch
Windows 7 Home Premium 32-bit




