It seems that the GTX470 in SLI hits the sweet spot for the price/performance ratio. That will probably be my next setup.
Same here going to sell my 5870's and probably get some 470's.
It seems that the GTX470 in SLI hits the sweet spot for the price/performance ratio. That will probably be my next setup.
has anyone tried tri-sli with 1x display per gpu/card??
thanks alot guys!!

I read the PCPer review, and I don't get some of his cost analysis. He adds the cost of the ActiveDP adapter to the ATI setup because he couldn't find a monitor with a DP connection in the "low-end (sub $230) 24-in 1080p panels available".
First, few 24" panels are 1080p. Most 24" panels are 1920x1200. To use 3D Surround you need a 1920x1080p 120Hz panel - not a 1920x1200 panel. So, he seems to be setting criteria that aren't reasonable and possibly unattainable. Most 1080p panels are 22" (actually 21.5") or 23" on the diagonal. This brings the panel price down. Additionally, both Dell and HP have IPS panels in these sizes in the $289 price range.
Secondly, he seems to believe that users will spend between $600 - $900 on dual high-end GPUs from NVIDIA, but would only be looking at "low-end monitors." I would think these users would want the images they paid so much to generate to be displayed on at least a mid-range display. I believe most of these users would know the benefit of an IPS panel and be willing to spend the money on this quality panel.I don't recall him saying that in the review, I think that comes down to your opinion on what is low end vs High End. I have no problem with my FH2401 monitors and I got them for $189 a piece. Are there any IPS 3D panels? I found one for 10K from panasonic. Are you going to tell me that it is worth that much money.
Finally, in his closing thoughts he thinks that if users get the chance to experience 3D Surround, they would spend the extra $650 for the 120Hz panels and the glasses. But, earlier he fails to make any concession that users would pay an extra $150 for three IPS panels with DisplayPort connections. Most users I know would be willing to pay the small additional cost ($50/panel) for a better quality panel with more connection options.
Based on what I've read (NV didn't send me any hardware to evaluate), NVIDIA has a compelling offering. However, I feel that this review attempts to shoehorn in a price argument that adds $100 to the ATI cost. While someone might say it's "only $100", it basically doubles the cost difference between a 5870 and GTX470 SLI, or a 5970 and GTX480 SLI. For an additional comparison it adds another 25% savings when comparing a single 5870 to GTX480 SLI.

Above you can see we have included the $100 price for an active DisplayPort to DVI adapter that is going to be required for users if you are not using native DisplayPort monitors. There are still very few of those adapters on the market and we couldn't find any on the low-end (sub $230) 24-in 1080p panels available.
Requiring SLI may also mean users would have to upgrade their PSU to handle the two cards.
The cost and quality of the panel does come into play when he specifically makes cost and feature arguments about specific panels.

The only way pricing arguments can have any relevance is if each individual buyer crunches the numbers that apply to HIS situation. There are too many factors (budget, preferences, upgrade vs new system) for one generalization to apply for everyone. I often find it annoying when someone decides to become the spokesman for the entire gaming market. What i do find great is that there are now more options for triple-screen gaming.

While I agree with you on some of the debate, you overlook that you can do surround with 2 series cards which can now be picked up for cheap. So that could be compared to ATI low end offerings as well.
And I am honestly not trying to convert anyone to Nvidia, I could care less, but in reality the cards and performance speak for themselves and anyone should see that but instead, people keep making up excuses and other nonsense. And Nvidia is not strict at all on what monitors you can have, all you need is DVI monitor which every monitor on the market has. So with that I think you got it mixed up ATI is the one that is strict on what monitors you can use without adapters.
Also Nvidia clearly has more feature list on there cards. And they also have more performance apples to apples they do there is no denying it.
[quote]While I agree with you on some of the debate, you overlook that you can do surround with 2 series cards which can now be picked up for cheap. So that could be compared to ATI low end offerings as well.
And I am honestly not trying to convert anyone to Nvidia, I could care less, but in reality the cards and performance speak for themselves and anyone should see that but instead, people keep making up excuses and other nonsense. And Nvidia is not strict at all on what monitors you can have, all you need is DVI monitor which every monitor on the market has. So with that I think you got it mixed up ATI is the one that is strict on what monitors you can use without adapters.
Also Nvidia clearly has more feature list on there cards. And they also have more performance apples to apples they do there is no denying it.

[quote]
While normally I'd agree that the 200 series cards can be bought for cheap, it's actually trying to find them that's the issue. It's buy them used or not at all atm. And you are incorrect, nVidia does [EDIT: not] allow for 3x2, 4x1 (actually spanned), or even 3D in a 3x1 Portrait setup. If I'm correct all the monitors have to be the same model to work in 3D and for normal surround they all have to have the same resolution (not just use the same resolution like in eyefinity). And I wasn't trying to short sight the obvious gap in performance. I even mentioned it.
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