Testseek.fr ont rassemblé 33 examens experts du Asus GeForce GTX 580 1.5GB GDDR5 PCIe ENGTX580/2DI/1536MD5 et l'estimation moyenne est 86%. Faites descendre l'écran et voyez les toutes les revues pour Asus GeForce GTX 580 1.5GB GDDR5 PCIe ENGTX580/2DI/1536MD5.
November 2010
(86%)
33 Avis
Note moyenne issue des avis d’experts sur ce produit.
Utilisateurs
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0 Avis
Note moyenne délivrée par les utilisateurs du produit.
Class leading performance, Pre-overclocked, Excellent overclocking headroom, Excellent tessellation and AA performance, Efficient and cool operation, CUDA and PhysX support, Well packaged, Voltage Tweaking support, 3 years warranty
Weak bundle, Price
Evaluating Nvidia’s GTX580 is fairly straightforward. It’s without a doubt the best single GPU graphics card available on the market. The only real competition would be from AMD HD5970, which unfortunately we didn’t have on test. However, given that t...
Extrait: With the ENGTX580, ASUS sends its first GTX580 based card into the ring to fight for the performance crown. The starting position should definitely be a good one and were therefore very curious about the results which will be achieved in our tests. Fur...
Priced competitively at £399 and friendly to overclockers, the Asus GeForce GTX 580 is an obvious choice for those building a new gaming machine. If you've already got a high-end gaming machine, with a graphics card of the class of a GeForce GTX 480 o...
The ASUS ENGTX580 is a great video card, but its value is somewhat undermined by multi-GPU competition from AMD. It is definitely a premium implementation of the GeForce GTX 580. Everything about it oozes quality, from the packaging to the video card i...
NVIDIA delivered on their promise to improve the performance, temperatures and power consumption with the GTX 580. Although they were not major improvements in the latter two areas, they were improvements none-the-less. The game performance was truly ...
Performance is fantastic, especially when the card is overclocked, Quiet operation while maintaining reasonable temperatures during load, Fastest Single GPU card on the market, 3 Year Warranty
umption still are a bit on the high side.
While we could go into much detail about the newly improved GF110 chip that the GTX 580 uses, we feel it is more important to highlight the actual features that we liked about this card. Of course it is a nice improvement to have 512 CUDA cores, 1 mo...
The simple fact right up front here is that the GeForce GTX 580 avoids the pitfalls of the GF100 card release, such as high power consumption, high temperatures, and high noise levels we saw in those models. As such, the 580 could be seen to render the...
Fastest singleunit DX11 graphics accelerator available, Matches performance with dualGPU Radeon HD 5970, Outstanding performance for ultra highend games, Much lower power consumption vs GTX 480, Reduced heat output and cooling fan noise, Fan exhausts all heated air outside of case, Includes native HDMI audio/video output, Adds 32x CSAA postprocessing detail, Supports tripleSLI function
Very expensive premiumlevel product, Outperformed by overclocked GTX 460's in SLI, Outperformed by CrossFire Radeon HD 6870's
IMPORTANT: Although the rating and final score mentioned in this conclusion are made to be as objective as possible, please be advised that every author perceives these factors differently at various points in time. While we each do our best to ensure...
The GeForce GTX 580 was an unorganized launch from our perspective. Nvidia was unable to help with samples and the board partners we spoke to were foggy on the launch day details. In short, it was a bit of a mess and we were a little late with our cov...
Substantial performance improvement over GTX 480, Large reduction in power consumption vs. GTX 480, Quieter than other cards in this performance class, Native HDMI output, Software voltage control via SmartDoctor, Tiny overclock out of the box, Support fo
Still not as power efficient as AMD's designs, Power draw limiter could complicate advanced overclocking, Still limited to two active display outputs per card, Overclock out of the box too small to make any difference, High price, DirectX 11 relevance lim
NVIDIA's new GeForce GTX 580 feels to deliver what I would have expected from the original GTX 480. The card is blazing fast, especially in newer DX11 titles it often beats AMD's dual-GPU flagship Radeon HD 5970. This performance upgrade helps NVIDIA s...