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ASUS GeForce® Pascal GT 1030 2GB GDDR5 64bit low profile graphics card for silent HTPC build (with I/O port brackets)/Silent passive cooling means true 0dB/ AUTO-EXTREME Technology/ GPU Tweak II /OC Mode - GPU Boost Clock : 1506 MHz , GPU Base Clock : 1266 MHz/ Gaming Mode (Default) - GPU Boost Clock : 1468 MHz , GPU Base Clock : 1228 MHz/ 384 Cuda Cores/ Memory Clock 3004 MHz (6008 MHz GDDR5)
A**.
Amazing gpu.
Good graphics card at this budget segment. I have got this in 6500 Rs. If it is paired with better cpu like i3 or core 2 quad q6600 it can give 50+fps in 720p high settings or 1080p low settings. I recommend you to not pair this gpu with core2 duo cpu or pentium dual core cpu otherwise it will bottleneck this graphics card.
P**S
Brilliant Product, Bad Packaging!
The product i.e. The Nvidia GT 1030 graphic card is for entry mid range gaming,Power supply - 300 wIt is PCIE backward compatibleI prefer passive heatsink over active heatsinkI received a good product , but the package was tampered (Bad Packaging)
S**Y
Reuturned.
I Returned
A**.
Best for beginners
Best for normal uses, not much for gaming.For games, sky is the limit.
A**G
Good Graphics card but costly.
Currently is very costly and MRP is 8791.
A**R
Best budget gpu in 2018
For 7k rs it isn't really a budget gpu but considering other gpu prices it's great performance to price.Faster delivery and if this was for 5-6k rs it wudve been a 5*
R**V
1 year of use after that I am writing this :-
I use this card from last 1 year and my opinion on this card is its not ment for gaming.You can use it for gaming but you can't play games on high or ultra setting. If you use this card for low setting gaming then you will definitely get 60 to 100+ FPS.But now in 2019 its not good,ya if you have a tight budged go for it. Rest all card is good for video editing and for low games.This card can play all games but in some game you will get less then 30 fps also which is not good for gaming in my personal I play this games1. Fortnite (low setting) 100+ fps2.Apex legend (low setting) 80 to 120 fps3.Black ops 2 (ultra setting) 70 to 100fps4.CSGO (ultra setting) 100+ fpsThis are some game I play and enjoy them on lower setting
S**A
Good for esports titles
Gives me 220+fps in valorant! Idel temperature 40 to 46 and max temperature i got 65 to 67 just use a good hdmi cable
S**D
A very good silent no frills card
I bought this to replace a higher powered Radeon card which used a couple of cans for cooling. I had been doing some gaming (elite) and thought the Radeon would be best value. However as my primary use for my pc is audio recording in my studio I felt going back to a card with no fan would make a huge difference to the noise generated by the PC. It did! This one is onbiously completely silent and, surprisingly, quite powerful. Ok, it’s not a gaming card but it works ok for most games. I ran Elite at 4k on high quality and it was smooth for the most part. When things get complicated though (docking) it showed its limitations. Switching down to medium quality fixes this.If you want (like me) a silent card to run your desktop at 4k and occasional game use - and don’t expect full performance - then this is excellent.
P**O
Perfect for UltraHD HTPC
Bought it for UltraHD HTPC and it works exactly as expected.I get 2160p60 resolution over HDMI which is exactly what I needed. It also supports hardware acceleration of videos like H264, HEVC, HEVC hi10p, or VP9 without any issues.The only thing is struggles to play is HEVC hi10p HDR UltraHD blurays using MadVR, which appears to need about 3.5GB of vram. Not a big deal since there is no much content out there yet anyway.
D**M
A great compact fanless graphics card for high res low noise builds. Can be painful with linux.
This is the card to get if you need a fanless card for normal desktop work on 4k type screens with decent UEFI support. A lot of fanless cards can't even display 4k let alone manage decent performance like this card. It only over heats and throttles if you try and use it for computation flat out for too long and don't directly cool it. I tried it's video encoding and it spent most of it's time throttled down.The card is also small enough to not need a slot support and will easily fit in a compact case (e.g. a 2U rackmount). I didn't actually buy it for a silent build but in order to have a less cramped build when using multiple graphics cards while passing through a high powered graphics card to a windows VM. This high powered card has a similar db to a jet engine under load when it gets too hot and wasn't going well cramped in with a super high speed NIC, high core CPU and silly fast NVME drive. This card solved the problem and has hugely reduced temperatures without me adding any fans.So .. buy this if you need high res. and minimal 3D. It's great for any 3D desktop effects your into, and You can certainly play older games and some simpler modern games with this card, but you may need a fan / open case with low ambient temp. to prevent throttling. If you have such a retro CPU you need it for video decoding you probably can run a decent looking dekstop at a decent resolution anyway and would be better paired with a cheaper card.It pays to use the propietary drivers under linux if you want a slick high res fancy desktop like kde and gnome with loads of effects .. but as they aren't open source they aren't well integrated and can cause no end of problems .. e.g. required more work than I could be bothered with to integrate with my monitoring software (libre) .. the only hardware I have in a large stack like that, doesn't like wayland at all, required hacks to allow DDC (which I used for switching displays when doing VM passthrough) .. oh yeah .. and required fixes to work with the recent kernel I was using. I or someone like me would have patched all them of course .. but it's not open source .. so .. you're really better off with AMD for linux or if you can bear it .. using the open source drivers (they're not that bad .. but personally I get tweaked out by clunky mouse pointers or 2 bit colour 4k res desktops). As far as I can tell .. there is no extra pain under windows vs other graphics cards so do not hesitate if you're going for main use in windows.
G**V
Pretty impressed
I put this into my 2010 model Dell desktop. It has a 350Watt PSU and is apparently more than enough for the card.My Windows experience score went to 7.7 for both graphics and gaming graphics.At £71 it's not cheap for a low-med range card, but I wanted something quiet and a bit better than the 7 year old card it replaced.The box it came in had a low profile bracket, a booklet and a driver cd. It was pretty well packed. The card looks just like the picture with the massive finned heatsink.CS Source went from 30fps to about 270fps - on the lowish settings I was previously using.
R**R
It's quiet - and it's cool - and it runs 1080p/full HD
I am not a PC gamer [Xbox man, myself], so I don't need a high end card, but I DO need a card that will handle full HD, preferably at 60 FPS, as I watch a lot of stuff.And I like peace & quiet - so I want a passive card - i.e. no fan.My existing passive card was running hot, so I worried about upgrading with another passive card, but I reasoned that a more powerful card ought to have to do less work and so ought to run cooler.And I am right. This card runs consistently between 34 & 39 degrees C - which is 15 degrees cooler than the older card, which consistently ran at 50-55 degrees.The card does not require a separate power cable, as it gets what it needs from the PCIe. It comes fitted with a full height bracket, but there is a low-rise bracket in the box.All in all, a good piece of kit if all you want it to do is watch stuff.
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