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Akk! you on a laptop?
If so Im afraid you cannot upgrade your video card. :-? Its built in. |
Yep, looks like you will have to either purchase/build a desktop machine or a new laptop for SHV.
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Yeah, ur gona need a desktop or a new laptop with some mure umph to it.. 1.8ghz is kinda week for modern gaming even if its a quad core because most games poorly utilize all cores.
The graphics card is also an issue. Integrated graphics as a rule generally suck for gaming. If it was a desktop i woulda recomended adding in a graphics card and possible overclocking the CPU but since you cant get past the graphics card issue overlclocking the CPU would me a moot point.. Good luck and sorry. wish we coulda had better news. |
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Sorry Capt. Matt. Not sure why I assumed it was a laptop. :oops:
So it is a Gateway desktop machine. About 2 or 3 years old? Also did you run CPU z program? |
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Hopefully we are on the right track now
Ok Capt MattJ, I did some research on this as I must admit that I built my own machine around a similar time to you purchasing this computer but I went down the Intel Core 2 Duo route (E6600 2.4Ghz oc'd now to 3.2Ghz). So I am not overly familiar with AMD from this time scale of 2008.
You have a Gateway desktop machine with a AMD Phemom X4 9150e CPU clocked at 1.8Ghz. Firstly the e in the spec denotes that it is an energy efficient CPU. It is a quad core but has a slow (laptop style) clock speed of only 1.8Ghz. Your motherboard is a Gateway RS780 which is based on the AMD 780G chipset. I searched for your motherboard spec online and I think that I have found it here. The important spec to take from this is: Quote:
If my post doesn't make sense then excuse me as I am somewhat bleary eyed and tired. :oops: |
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Can anyone chime in as to what is a decent GPU card for SHV as I must admit that I still haven't purchased SHV. I'm still waiting for it to go in the bargain bin price category. :smug: |
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Edit: i have a GX 4200-09 Series. It says info on models may vary, and it gave 3 numbers. 300 W/400 W/500 W |
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Tell us how you go with the power supply info. :) |
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yeah, so you might be in luck after all. Those ATI cards are pretty decent cards for there money... Maybe you should also look at the gtx 260. It was a great card for its money during its hayday and i cant imagine it getting any more expensive since then. Your biggest problem is your CPU clock speeds...
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Make sure to note the brand of PSU, and if you can get the Amperages of the diagram that should be on it.
Even if it's a 500W, low Amps would still make it unsuitable. I'd say a GTX260 and a new PSU, or go all the way and get a decent quad, new PSU and GTX460. Should hold you over for 3-5 years. |
Yeah a GTX 460 is another good option on the GPU front. At the end of the day if he only has USD $150 to spend then he can forget about new cpu and mb, graphics card and memory. Obviously the GPU is the weak link currently in his system but if he then goes out and buys a new graphics card then the crummy clockspeed CPU he has will become the bottleneck. Let's see what he comes back with regarding the PSU.
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