RE: Dramatic Performance Improvement changing from Onboard to Dedicated Graphics Card
ebalong,
Here's a convincing example of the performance enhancement of a system in which only change is using a dedicated graphics card in place of the integrated GPU.
Running Passmark Performance Test 8.0 on my mother's Athlon II X3 450-based next- door- neighbor- brew computer "Grandma's TurboKitten 3000" [3.2GHz 3-core, 4GB RAM, MB> Gigabyte M68MT-S2, Win 7 Home] using the GeForce 7025 nForce 630a integrated graphics which uses/shares 256MB of system, the benchmark rating was atrocious- an overall score of 262. In the baseline list of Athlon 450 computers, the top ranked has a score of 2159, [ASUS M5A 78L MB, and OCZ Vertex SSD, and significantly, a Radeon 6670].
TurboKitten 3000 achieved the second lowest score for this CPU. While the CPU, memory, 2D, and disk scores were not miles away from other systems with this CPU, the 3D score was dramatically awful. Where the top Athlon 450 system had a 2D / 3D of 542/1635, TK3000 scored 420 in 2D and an abysmal 24 in 3D ! The lowest rated system had a 3D score of 19! and sure enough, it was using GeForce 6159SE nforce 430, another, earlier incarnation of integrated graphics. The "n" in nForce must stand for "no" as the best performance in 2D on Passmark is a score of 511. That's really not bad at all, and even worries me a bit as my Dell Precision T5400 with a quad core Xeon 3.16GHz, and a Quadro FX 4800 (1.5GB) scores 512. However, the FX4800 3D is 912 whereas the best 3D of the 7025 / noForce 630a is 40. Worst 2D is 119 and the worst 3D is 4!
To make a long story short, I decided to find the best specification card I could for the lowest eBay Buy It Now price- so as not to spend forever on it- and quickly found a Newegg eBay offer of an EGVA GeForce GT 240 , "manufacturer refurbished" for $30 and including shipping. The 128 bit GT 240 was never a brilliant device- about $100 in it's prime, but it has 1GB of GDDR5 memory, 96 CUDA cores, a memory bandwidth of 54.4 and reasonable clock speeds, plus VGA, DVI, and HDMI ports. I liked the 70W power rating of the GT 240 too (TK3000 has a 430W PS) whereas my previous card in the T5400, a GTX 285 took 205W and it looks as though about all the GTX cards grab a lot of electrons.
The GT 240 arrived in only 4 days, and seemed to be a new card in an EGVA box. I popped it in, without disabling the integrated graphics as I tried to get into the BIOS/ setup without success- never saw a spin up setup prompt- what the hell key is it?, plugged the 21" Acer into VGA, updated the driver through Control Panel > Device Manager and ran Performance Test 8.0 again.
Results were dramatically better. While the CPU. memory and disk were similar, the rating improved from 262 to 1394! with the significant numbers being the 2D/ 3D going from 420 / 24 to 449 / 976 . In the Windows Experience Index, memory improved from 5.9 to 7.0- did the shared graphics memory cause a bottleneck?, Aero graphics from 3.9 to 6.7, 3D business/ gaming graphics went from 3.3 to 6.7. As the 3D score of 3.3 was the lowest parameter in the WEI, the overall score went from 3.3 to the new lowest- the 5.9 of the Disk, which everyone in the world must have who doesn't use an SSD,..
While I've seen some respectable rating results from the i7 integrated HD4000, and the onboard graphics of the upcoming Haswell CPU are supposed to be quite a bit better, I think this example, while using many words, tells a simple story. If you do anything with 3D, look at the degree of improvement possible by changing from integrated to dedicated graphics after 20 minutes' card hunting and $30!
Cheers,
BambiBoom