ben2dx Posted August 1, 2007 Share Posted August 1, 2007 I have a question. I've been looking at tigerdirect.com for a new motherboard and some of them say nvidia cipset, and others say intel chipset. Whats the chipset thing, is it the type of intergrated graphics? and i plan on getting windows vista in about a year, do i need a special mobo to get vista, because some say vista ready others don't. Thanks! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Gryph Posted August 1, 2007 Share Posted August 1, 2007 The chipset has nothing to do with the graphics. And either should probably work fine in Vista. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
ken_cinder Posted August 1, 2007 Share Posted August 1, 2007 Hmm I'm not sure how to put this...... Think of a chipset like a train station with multiple tracks leading to different destinations. The CPU, generally speaking, being the train yard where all the trains are kept. The chipset controls where all the trains go, how fast they go, and which order they go in. That do? P.S. Saying the chipset has nothing to do with your graphics is a severe understatement Gryph. You can't pair a chipset designed for a specific company with another, and expect similar performance. That's like pairing my Radeon Express 580X chipset with an NvIdia card, sure it'll work but it's features are designed around ATi cards and it controls the bus the cards run on. (Not to mention, Crossfire....) Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Shibathedog Posted August 2, 2007 Share Posted August 2, 2007 If you want Dual graphics cards, Get the 680i Chipset by Nvidia, If you only want one (or maybe want two, but not two really fast ones like 8800GTXs) get the 650i Chipset by Nvidia. They overclock excellently but im going to advise you against it since you really have to know what your doing or you'll break something. Intel Chipsets are okay too but make sure you get either the 975 or the 965 chipset. These also overclock pretty well depending on the board, but dont usually have the best support for dual graphics cards Dont spend extra money on stuff you dont need/will never use though. Your not losing out by getting one of those intel chipsets. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Ahmad89 Posted August 2, 2007 Share Posted August 2, 2007 Isnt thier auto overclocking. I read about it a little. Some say its bad and some say its good. I wont try it until probably the speed isnt good enough for games or if i need a new pc thats faster in which i will give it a try first. Do you recommend auto overclocking?? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Gryph Posted August 2, 2007 Share Posted August 2, 2007 P.S. Saying the chipset has nothing to do with your graphics is a severe understatement Gryph. You can't pair a chipset designed for a specific company with another, and expect similar performance. That's like pairing my Radeon Express 580X chipset with an NvIdia card, sure it'll work but it's features are designed around ATi cards and it controls the bus the cards run on. (Not to mention, Crossfire....)Yeah, you're right. I should have worded it better. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
ben2dx Posted August 6, 2007 Author Share Posted August 6, 2007 Isnt thier auto overclocking. I read about it a little. Some say its bad and some say its good. I wont try it until probably the speed isnt good enough for games or if i need a new pc thats faster in which i will give it a try first. Do you recommend auto overclocking??Only overclock if you know exactly what you are doing because you don't want to fry your parts. I don't recomend it because i wouldn't want to risk frying my computer parts. so your saying if im going to get an nvidia graphics card get an nvidia chipset? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Wizard Posted August 6, 2007 Share Posted August 6, 2007 Isnt thier auto overclocking. I read about it a little. Some say its bad and some say its good. I wont try it until probably the speed isnt good enough for games or if i need a new pc thats faster in which i will give it a try first. Do you recommend auto overclocking??Only overclock if you know exactly what you are doing because you don't want to fry your parts. I don't recomend it because i wouldn't want to risk frying my computer parts. so your saying if im going to get an nvidia graphics card get an nvidia chipset?In short, yes. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Shibathedog Posted August 6, 2007 Share Posted August 6, 2007 yeah If you talking about EPP Profiles and SLI Certified parts for the auto overclocking, Yeah you can use it, its okay and its safe, but alot of people dont like it because you can overclock ALOT more IF you know what your doing and you do it manually. There isnt really any harm in using it though. In fact you should because it will set all your BIOS settings correctly for it (assuming all your parts are certified and support it) Overclocking isnt really the dangerous part, its overvolting, but still, if you dont know exactly what something does just leave it on auto/dont touch it Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Create an account or sign in to comment
You need to be a member in order to leave a comment
Create an account
Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!
Register a new accountSign in
Already have an account? Sign in here.
Sign In Now