Single grafic card, SLI or CF is beter an why?

ps-jl

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Jun 22, 2009
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I am planning on buying a pc. To be specific i will be using this pc for progamming applications, for gamming (occasionaly) and in the near future for grafic applications. So please help me out choose my best bet.
 
lol watch the typos there.....

i suggest you get the best single card for the money that you have but make sure your motherboard supports SLI/CF so when you need the extra performance you don't need a new card, just need to add another of what you have
 
This sounds like a working system, in which case I'd stick to just one card, SLI and CF can lead to extra problems and I do n't suppose you'll be very happy having to diagnose them when working to a deadline!
 
Yeah, I'd also go for the single card solution, either a ATI 4890 or an NVidia 275

As like me working on the PC a Lot, it will be on near all the time, 2 cards create extra heat in my room I can do without with summer here
and an extra card over a year will increase running costs a fair enough amount that a single cards savings could be used to buy a better single card 😉

oh, and maybe a little quieter too

The Asus 4890 come factory OC'd to 950 MHz I understand and is still one of the cheaper cards of that type + has overvolting OCing facilities too.

But I like the PhysX feature of the 275 Nvidia card maybe...

anyways, Good Luck!
 
I'd also say single card for sure. I ran 8800GT's in SLI for around a year and recently switched to a single GTX 285 and read over and over in forums that there would be none to very little performance gain. TBH it was probably the best performance gain i h ave seen in any GPU upgrade as far as real time performance. Benchamarking was relatively the same with no real gain, but the actual gameplay was very much boosted.
 
I usually use a single card setup. When it's time to upgrade i sell the older card and buy a new single card. If the price differential isn't too much i will buy a crossfire capable motherboard just to keep the option alive though.
 
It reminds me of something I read in a car magazine probably 10+ years ago: People buy their cars for the horsepower, but they love them for the torque. To me, benchmarking is horsepower, and how a system actually runs is the torque.