Difference Between Nvidia Geforce Gtx 750 & 750 Ti
#21
Posted 02 December 2015 - 03:10 PM
#22
Posted 02 December 2015 - 03:41 PM
Upgraded to a new rig with an i7 and a 760ti 2gb. Getting ~55 avg on all max settings.
Roommate slapped a 960 2gb FTW in that old i5 rig when the 650ti finally gave out after three years; run on all max about 65 avg.
ATF13, on 19 November 2015 - 02:23 PM, said:
I order a 970 4gb FTW yesterday, will be here Friday . I'll let you know how it goes!
All cards mentioned are EVGA NVidia GeForce GTX brand. Only ones we buy.
Edit: Meant to type 760ti, not 750ti.
Edited by t Khrist, 02 December 2015 - 03:55 PM.
#23
Posted 02 December 2015 - 03:46 PM
Goose, on 02 December 2015 - 03:10 PM, said:
I bought the GTX 750 TI, which requires a PCI Express.
The computer I have has a PCI standard which isn't compatible, however, I'm wondering if it's possible to convert the PCI standard into an express, which, however, I'm guessing isn't possible.
Had I bought the GTX 750 I'm guessing that I wouldn't need an express, but I could be wrong.
Edited by Scout Derek, 02 December 2015 - 03:47 PM.
#24
Posted 02 December 2015 - 03:59 PM
https://en.wikipedia...iki/PCI_Express
I used to know what was the most powerful AGP card, eva', but since everything older then a GTX 480 is deprecated, it hasn't had a driver refresh in almost as long.
Get your money back from that 750Ti, and save up ~$800 for a whole new box …
#25
Posted 03 December 2015 - 07:37 AM
From the page:
- 300 Watt or greater power supply.****
- PCI Express, PCI Express 2.0 or PCI Express 3.0 compliant motherboard with one graphics slot.
- Windows 10 32/64bit, Windows 8 32/64bit, Windows 7 32/64bit, Windows Vista 32/64bit, Windows XP 32/64bit
[color=#000000]****Minimum system power requirement based on a PC configured with an Intel Core i7 3.2GHz processor.[/color]
[color=#000000]I bolded the points on what I have, the PCI Express is not what I have on hand currently.[/color]
#26
Posted 03 December 2015 - 09:26 AM
There's no issue with the card: It's your motherboard, and by extension, your CPU.
There are no cards in production that aren't PCI-E, ergo if you can't use PCI-E, your current system is untenable.
I presume there is no new motherboard you could buy that would let you recycle your CPU (and RAM,) and allow you access to PCI-E, but maybe … on E-Bay, if you knew exactly about your CPU and it's compatible chipsets.
Maybe.
Get your money back on the 750Ti; Install HWiNFO, ID your parts, then google them something fierce …
Edited by Goose, 03 December 2015 - 09:28 AM.
#27
Posted 03 December 2015 - 09:46 AM
Scout we've had three threads from you over time where people specced you computers did you buy none of them?
http://mwomercs.com/...o-getting-this/
Here you say you have an I3 even the first (clarkdale) had PCI-E motherboards........
#28
Posted 03 December 2015 - 10:06 AM
Mr. Derek said "i3," and that's all. Patently uninformative.
HWiNFO, CPU-Z, AIDA, Sandra, something to address the lack of clues, here …
#29
Posted 03 December 2015 - 02:07 PM
DV McKenna, on 03 December 2015 - 09:46 AM, said:
Scout we've had three threads from you over time where people specced you computers did you buy none of them?
http://mwomercs.com/...o-getting-this/
Here you say you have an I3 even the first (clarkdale) had PCI-E motherboards........
Those threads I never did buy them, as resources were devoted to other things at the time, they were moreover questioning on what they would need and how much, hence the threads of asking about the video card and power supply as opposed to now about asking just about the card and not power supply.
And yes, the I3 I mentioned I still have but...!
When I went to go look at the computer specs, the Motherboard was listed as a PCI - STANDARD.
Which I find odd, what am I missing here?
Goose, on 03 December 2015 - 09:26 AM, said:
There's no issue with the card: It's your motherboard, and by extension, your CPU.
There are no cards in production that aren't PCI-E, ergo if you can't use PCI-E, your current system is untenable.
I presume there is no new motherboard you could buy that would let you recycle your CPU (and RAM,) and allow you access to PCI-E, but maybe … on E-Bay, if you knew exactly about your CPU and it's compatible chipsets.
Maybe.
Get your money back on the 750Ti; Install HWiNFO, ID your parts, then google them something fierce …
Haven't refunded it yet, but am going to dig a bit deeper into the tower's specifications to figure out what the hell it isn't working, and get you all the specs of the computer.
I'll tell you what happens with the gpu when I install it.
With the new video card and power supply in, I turn on the computer, it boots up, but never displays past the loading screen.
So here's another questions I have as well:
would the type of monitor affect the gpu from displaying what is needed?
Edited by Scout Derek, 03 December 2015 - 02:08 PM.
#30
Posted 03 December 2015 - 03:46 PM
Which I find hard to believe because it must run like crap... Like not at all.
As Goose says use CPU Z to identify the chip board and ram.
2 user(s) are reading this topic
0 members, 2 guests, 0 anonymous users