eVGA GeForce 8600 GT 256 MB Superclocked

Graphics cards 1048 Page 4 of 11 Published by

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Page 4

On the next few pages we'll show you some photos. The images were taken at 2560x1920 pixels and then scaled down. The camera used was a Sony DCS-F707 5.1 MegaPixel.

In alphabetical order again.

eVGA GeFore 8800 GT Superclocked edition  review - Copyright 2007 Guru3D.com

To let you know what to look for in the stores, yes... the box.

eVGA GeFore 8800 GT Superclocked edition  review - Copyright 2007 Guru3D.com

A clean, pretty looking design. The 8600 GT cards have quite a low power draw due to the lower clocks, roughly 45 Watts. So here we do not see a 6-pin power connector. Which quite honestly I would have liked to see... why ? Because it's good for overclocking.

eVGA GeFore 8800 GT Superclocked edition  review - Copyright 2007 Guru3D.com

The GT (and GTS) 8600 cards all support two dual-link, HDCP enabled DVI-I outputs for high-resolution output connectivity. To your upper left you can see a 7-pin video out port for support for S-Video, composite and component (YPrPb) through an optional dongle. Most board partner include some sort of S-video cable and analog HDTV cable for this.

The card is not HDCP capable, it's up to the board partners to decide to include a crypto chip for this function.

eVGA GeFore 8800 GT Superclocked edition  review - Copyright 2007 Guru3D.com

Toush, hiny, bottocks... whatever you like to call it. We're looking at the rear end of the videocard.

eVGA GeFore 8800 GT Superclocked edition  review - Copyright 2007 Guru3D.com

Fired up and benchmarking in the test system. Oh yeah... it can do SLI as well.

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