I have been reaserarchig, and I found this about my video card:
Palit Microsystems, the manufacturer, make the Geforce 7600GS Sonic which has DDR3 memory. It is also a little bit overclocked from the default 400/400 to 450/500.
They also make the Geforce 7600GT, which runs at the frequency 560/700.
These two cards are physically almost identical. Same memory chip, same GPU, same circuit board, same fan. The only difference being the BIOS. The GT model bios is set to run at a higher voltage, and therefore, has a higher clock speed.
It has been done, where the GS Model has its BIOS flashed, thus turning it into a GT model, then it can obtain the same clock frequencies as its older brother.
This is my evil, evil plan. The only downside I can see to this is that the card would run hotter, but even then, no hotter than the GT does. Even then, I have a aftermarket cooler installed, meaning the card barely reaches 50C while overclocked, after 3 hours of playing NFS Carbon.
Opinions please
Palit Microsystems, the manufacturer, make the Geforce 7600GS Sonic which has DDR3 memory. It is also a little bit overclocked from the default 400/400 to 450/500.
They also make the Geforce 7600GT, which runs at the frequency 560/700.
These two cards are physically almost identical. Same memory chip, same GPU, same circuit board, same fan. The only difference being the BIOS. The GT model bios is set to run at a higher voltage, and therefore, has a higher clock speed.
It has been done, where the GS Model has its BIOS flashed, thus turning it into a GT model, then it can obtain the same clock frequencies as its older brother.
This is my evil, evil plan. The only downside I can see to this is that the card would run hotter, but even then, no hotter than the GT does. Even then, I have a aftermarket cooler installed, meaning the card barely reaches 50C while overclocked, after 3 hours of playing NFS Carbon.
Opinions please



whats with that ??