PDA

View Full Version : STILL SHRINKWRAPPED-ATI Radeon X1800 XL 256 MB GDDR3 PCIE - $ 349> $320.00 > $310.00


ceato
Mar 11th, 2006, 05:28 PM
I have a brand new (still shrinkwrapped) ATI Radeon X1800 XL 256 MB GDDR3 PCI Express x16 video card (Cross Fire Ready) for sale.

It's currently selling for $526+tax at TigerDirect. Asking for $320.00 flat.

Meet, or pick up in Toronto. Will ship if out fo town. PM if interested. Thanks,

Details:
Specifications
GPU/VPU Radeon X1800 XL
Maximum Resolution 2048 x 1536 @ 85Hz
Video Memory 256MB
Memory Type 256-bit GDDR3
Memory Bandwidth 32GB/sec.
Interface Type PCI Express
Connector(s) Dual DVI VIVO
Multiple Monitors Support Yes

More details and pictures are here:

Radeon X1800XL (http://cgi.ebay.ca/ATI-Radeon-x1800xl-x1800-xl-256MB-PCIE-NEW-IN-BOX_W0QQitemZ8781928089QQcategoryZ40158QQrdZ1QQcmd ZViewItem)

keross1ve
Mar 11th, 2006, 05:42 PM
nice price bump

hausner
Mar 11th, 2006, 05:52 PM
hmm killer price for brand new

bump for ATI :D

ceato
Mar 18th, 2006, 11:52 AM
new price $310.00, still brand new and still shrinkwrapped!

Look at some of the reviews:

“With high quality AF enabled on the ATI Radeon X1800 XL, you will find the edge filtered much better than the GeForce 7800 GT, which is more blurry. The difference is quite visible in the second screenshot. With high quality AF enabled on the X1800 XL, the bottom of the angled wall is very smooth with no blurring. This really shows you the benefit of high quality AF; all angles are filtered "properly" with anisotropic filtering. This provides a very noticeable image quality benefit in game.” - HardOCP.com

“Radeon X1800 supports HDR with multisample AA; a feature which NVIDIA currently doesn’t provide with any of their GPUs.” - FiringSquad.com

“The architecture is interesting and adds enough features that NVIDIA will be the one playing catch up in that arena next time around.” - PCPer.com

“ATI's new high-quality anisotropic filtering modes had a negligible impact on performance, at least in FarCry. In fact, the difference in performance between the no-aniso tests, and the tests where 16x high-quality anisotropic filtering was applied was less than 10%.” - HotHardware.com