arrowHome arrow News arrow PowerColor X300SE Graphics Card Review
MVKTech Home Page
Main Menu
Home
News
Guides
Reviews
Previews
Downloads
Forums
Uploads
Links
Contact Us
Price Comparison
Compare prices Australia
Laptop
Tomtom
Digital Camera
Mobile Phones
Ink cartridges
VOIP
Compare prices NZ
Compare prices ZA
Latest Version
May.21
Downloads
FileNiBiTor v6.06
Latest Downloads
May.21
Downloads
FileNiBiTor v6.06
May.10
Downloads
FileEVG GTX680 (HC) PCIe 2048MB - Rev 01
May.10
Downloads
FileASU GTX680 (DT) PCIe 2048MB - Rev 01
May.10
Downloads
FileZTC GTX680 (DF) PCIe 2048MB - Rev 01
May.10
Downloads
FileEVG GTX680 (SC) PCIe 2048MB - Rev 01
Login Form





Lost Password?
No account yet? Register
PowerColor X300SE Graphics Card Review
Written by Mavke   
Wednesday, 20 October 2004
X-Bit Labs did a detailed review on the PowerColor X300SE graphics card. We tested a high-quality inexpensive graphics card from PowerColor based on ATI Radeon X300 chip. This is a nice solution for those users who don't need fast 3D but want to have the functionality missing in integrated graphics solutions.

ImagePowerColor X300SE Graphics Card Review

As we had feared before the tests, the 64-bit memory bus of the PowerColor X300 SE graphics card influenced its performance in the most negative way. The described product fall farthest behind the full-featured Radeon X300 version in games that don't use complex pixel shaders: it is the fill rate that affects the performance in them, and the narrow memory bus hits at this parameter most severely. The PowerColor X300 SE roughly delivers the performance of the Radeon 9200, but the full support of DirectX 9 makes it a more interesting product. Well, the Radeon 9200 and X300 SE just can't meet anywhere: the former only supports AGP, while the latter is for PCI Express platforms solely.

We actually liked this particular graphics card model from PowerColor. It is a well-made product that ensures good performance for its class. The only thing it lacks is support of multi-monitor configurations, which has already become a standard even for entry-level cards.

Is this card going to attract owners of systems with integrated graphics? Priced at about $80, it really can, in those special cases exposed early in this review when the integrated graphics core like i915G, nForce2 IGP or Radeon 9100 does not satisfy the owner with its low-quality 2D picture, lack of DirectX 9 support or missing TV output. The i915G system has one more unpleasant trait – Intel'sPowerColor X300 SE to save your system RAM for other tasks.

Cutting it short, the PowerColor X300 SE can be characterized like this: a high-quality inexpensive graphics card for users who don't need fast 3D but want to have the functionality missing in integrated graphics solutions.

As the PCI Express bus is gaining in popularity, there will appear inexpensive computers with this interface. Many of such computers will probably be equipped with OEM versions of RADEON X300/X300 SE graphics cards, also from PowerColor.

 
Compare Prices
Compare prices Canada
LCD TV
GPS
Digital Cameras
Smartphones
Laptops
LCD Monitors
MP3 Players
Appliances

Comptoir Hardware

New Reviews
Patriot Xporter Magnum 64GB USB Flash Disk
Gainward GeForce GTX 260 Standard Version
Gainward BLISS 9800 GX2 Dual-GPU Version
PowerColor Radeon HD 3650 Xtreme Cooling
Dragon Lasers Hulk Green Laser Technology
New Previews
NVIDIA GeForce 9800 GX2 Dual-GPU Version
PowerColor Radeon HD 3850 Xtreme Edition
PowerColor Radeon HD 2600 XT 256MB Card
HomeNewsGuidesReviewsPreviewsDownloadsForumsUploadsLinksContact UsTop
Copyright (c) 2009 - All rights reserved Powered by Flexwebhosting