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View Full Version : super duper graphics, or on board graphics .. is there a difference?



arthurking83
01-04-2012, 6:24pm
It started off relatively normally, I get a call last weekend .... "you got to come and fix my PC, it's got bricks"

Me: .. :confused: (obviously a technical terms I've not yet come across :p)

Sister is telling me that her screen is flickering a brick like pattern, when she plugs it into a particular wall socket, but it's not as bad if she runs it via an extension lead via another wall socket.
This has me thinking ... :beer_mug: it's time to switch off as my sis has done it again(PC wise)

Yesterday I had the time to go and help her, thinking that it'll probably be another easy fix by simply putting the DVI plug back in and tightening the retaining screws properly or something, but no!
This time she was for real.
Brick like flickering pattern was immediately diagnosed as a dead graphics chip on her Medion PC's motherboard, and I'm thinking about a $50 fix.. I'll just nip down the road to a DSE and get whatever they had in stock and she's right.

Too late in the day, so I brought it home and not having a spare PCIe graphic card laying around(I have heaps of older AGP cards, but no PCI cards.
But! I have one in my current PC, and maybe I'll just pull it out to confirm my suscpicion that it's the card and not some other m/b issue along the line somewhere.
Yep! beauty... it's just the card and she's right to go.. but it's now 11:59PM Sat, and it's going to be Sunday any second now, so there's no shop in the worlkd that'd be open at 1AM Sunday and I just want to get it sorted and get it back to her so that I don't have to go through the process of having to get it to her later in the week.. and so on and etc.

So the decision is made, MY PC is going to get downgraded from having a upper mid end graphics card(nvidia 400 series, from way back) to using the piddly onboard VGA in the form of a very low end type graphics Radeon(AMD) 4290 chip.
From the benchmarks I quickly flicked through, quite a substantial loss in GPU performance and total memory in going from the nividia graphics card to the on board AMD chip.

Oh well, for the sake of sanity and time management(my own time) it was easier to do this, and one day replace the now missing graphics card in my PC.

First of all, I had a fright after the initialisation, the max screen resolution was a miniscule 1400x1024, and massively distorted compared the curent mininium standard of 1920x1080(I've been used to on this 24" for the past two years).
Installed the latest Catalyst drivers and other oblique periphery software and bingo! .. I'm now back at 1920x1080 again .. cool as!

Screen looked redder than 'a bright red thing', so I had to redo the calibration again which is quite easy and quick now with the BasICColor software, and we're back to square one ... except for the issue now of a far inferior graphics chip performance.

But I'll be damned if I can see anywhere where it's made any difference.

All apps open and close and render as fast as the $100 graphics card did.
I was worrying about CaptureNX2 rendering it's 100Meg files woefully slow, but nope! Not one iota of difference that I can percieve.

Mind you I'm not a gamer and don't really care for them, but played a bit of Open Transport Tycoon a few months back for a bit of a laugh(rekindling some long lost youthfulness I guess), but that's about it, haven't touched it again for at least 3 months now.
But I don't need 2000fps on Doom of Fortune CCIX or whatever, but I used to assume that even for mild photo editing that a more substantial graphics card was helpful.

It's a fairly painless job to get a mid range $100 67xx or 68xx series graphics card and get going with high end graphics rendering again, but is there any point?

I've previously had on board graphics chips, years back, as the sole graphics GPU, and there's always been a difference in screen rendering between a graphics card and a motherboard graphics chip, but I'm now wondering is there any point any longer?

And for future PC builds:
Can I stop stressing over the slight performance hit of having a graphics chip on board the motherboard, and trying to source the best motherboard with no on board graphics.

Is anyone else running with a homebuilt PC and on board graphics chip instead of mid to high end graphics card?
I suppose if I ever get off my posterior and get myself a 27" Dell U2711 or something similar and require a GPU that's able to supply it's 25million by 19billion pixel rendering ability, I'll have to get a graphcs card once again, but as I see it currently, for the 1920x1080 res this (or any other)screen is capable of producing, I need not!


.. just a useless observation I made last night.

Kym
01-04-2012, 6:53pm
I'm running on board graphics.
ASRock Z68 Extreme3 Gen3 mobo with Intel HD graphics -- no need for anything else

Speedway
01-04-2012, 8:21pm
I also run onboard graphics with my relatively new computer and the old X300 express card is sitting in the back room gathering dust. Hi end graphics do nothing for image processing and are only useful when running high end extreme games, the only reason for having one for photos is if there is no on board graphics.
Keith.

arthurking83
01-04-2012, 8:59pm
I think you guys have it summed up. For most purposes there seems to be no need any more.
I've built all my PC's over the past 10 or more years but my PC before this current one lasted me 7 or so years. Back in them days a graphics card was the better option to go with if you wanted semi serious graphics ability(quality) otherwise you were lumbered with graphics chips from the likes of Via. Worked, but only just. I just took that philosophy with me without researching the technology more thoroughly I guess.
Call it a natural reaction. :D

But as I said, having done some reading up on the requirements of a screen such as the Dell U2711 with some important info from (member)Mic as well, it seems that this screen only works in it's ultimate mode via the Display Port connection, and/or a connection via both DVI-D ports, so either a Display Port capable motherboard is needed of one with dual DVI ports.
I don't know of any such products(yet).

I've been looking into some parts and pieces for my other sister who's asked me to look into building her a PC too soon, so it's good to knwo that on board graphics has come a long way.
Her needs are also in the basic realm .. office/internet/basic image browsing use .. so it saves her a hundred bucks or so too!

Chris G
02-04-2012, 10:11am
Yeh as said high end graphics cards are not needed as much as they used to be unless (A) Your gaming / wanting desent eye candy and (B) For 3D modeling / rendering and lastly multi screen displays.
I'm pretty sure photoshop's only reason for support on such cards is for the 3D handling sides of things and probably some plug'ins would benifit aswell.

The main reason that computers are as fast as they are today is actually due to computer games advancements. :th3:

Dual DVI is only available with maybe a low end but usually only mid to high end graphics cards, I can't say I've even seen a mainboard with dual dvi out.

Though for me I have always gone for the mid to high end cards as I do run dual montiors + high end games (I do love the eye candy lol) + 3D Programs and what not.

PS you can run doom on most mobile phones lol

Cheers

Chris

William
02-04-2012, 12:15pm
I'm using On Board Graphics as well and its capable of dual monitors

Rattus79
02-04-2012, 12:24pm
I'm running on board graphics.
ASRock Z68 Extreme3 Gen3 mobo with Intel HD graphics -- no need for anything else

I'm running the same MOBO and have had nothing but problems with bottleneck issues.

I upgraded the graphics card (nvidea GT440) but I play games too.

Photoshop will pass quite a lot of calculations to the GPU if it's available.

William
02-04-2012, 12:48pm
I have no problems , I do get this message when using CS6 ? but I just click it off and it works fine , Also the specs for my turdy Graphics : Note dual Display