RARE NVIDIA GeForce FX 5800 Ultra 128MB 8x AGP VGA, DVI Graphics Card
Item History & Price
Reference Number: Avaluer:29968238 | Memory Size: 128 MB |
Chipset Manufacturer: NVIDIA | Connectors: DVI, VGA |
Memory Type: GDDR2 | Chipset/GPU Model: NVIDIA GeForce FX 5800 Ultra |
Brand: Unbranded |
Auction includes quantity 1:
GeForce MX 5800 Ultra 128MB AGP 8x video card.
Pulled from a working system--used only lightly (by a grandma who never gamed).
Massive, fully-engulfing stock heat sink supports intense 3D-gaming.
Speeds:Core clock: 500MHzMemory clock: 500MHz (1000MHz effective)Memory type: 128MB GDDR2Memory interface: 128-bitMemory bandwidth: 16.00 GB/sGPU: NV30Core config: 4 pixel pipes, 2 vertex shaders, 8 texture mapping units, 4 ROPsInterface: AGP 8xDisplay ...outputs: VGA, DVI, S-videoOn Jun-30-20 at 07:02:26 PDT, seller added the following information:Appears to be a Leadtek WinFast A300, (probably white-box OEM--thus the missing label) with possibly custom fan solution.One online review says:
I've added two photos that are closeups to the fans. You can see the copper heat sink underneath.
"Underneath the aluminum casing on the A300 Ultra, you'll find a substantial copper-finned cooler mounted directly over the GPU and 2ns "DDR-2 type" RAM. There is a copper heatsink mounted to the back of the card as well. As you may already know, the GeForce FX 5800 Ultra runs at two different speeds, 300MHz core / 600MHz memory when in 2D Mode, and 500MHz core / 1000MHz memory when running 3D applications. Leadtek's cooling solution handled these clock speeds without a problem. As you'll see a little later, core temperatures remained well within acceptable limits even after hours of benchmarking."
On Jul-03-20 at 14:49:42 PDT, seller added the following information:I did my best to identify this card, since it is lacking markings.
As a few have questioned, I must admit that I cannot determine and prove whether this is a 5800 or a 5800 Ultra.Both cards were produced using the exact same NV30 chip--just sorted and binned differently.The 5800 was produced running at 400/800MHz default.The 5800 Ultra ran at 500/1000MHz default.
The nvidia settings lets you set this card to 500/1000MHz and it runs just fine and stays very cool due to its massive heat spreader and double fans ( a more vigourous cooling solution than the 5800 ultra design configuration that most nvidia partners produced).Even if this is "just" a 5800 and not an Ultra I'm confident you can get the same performance out of it.
GeForce MX 5800 Ultra 128MB AGP 8x video card.
Pulled from a working system--used only lightly (by a grandma who never gamed).
Massive, fully-engulfing stock heat sink supports intense 3D-gaming.
Speeds:Core clock: 500MHzMemory clock: 500MHz (1000MHz effective)Memory type: 128MB GDDR2Memory interface: 128-bitMemory bandwidth: 16.00 GB/sGPU: NV30Core config: 4 pixel pipes, 2 vertex shaders, 8 texture mapping units, 4 ROPsInterface: AGP 8xDisplay ...outputs: VGA, DVI, S-videoOn Jun-30-20 at 07:02:26 PDT, seller added the following information:Appears to be a Leadtek WinFast A300, (probably white-box OEM--thus the missing label) with possibly custom fan solution.One online review says:
I've added two photos that are closeups to the fans. You can see the copper heat sink underneath.
"Underneath the aluminum casing on the A300 Ultra, you'll find a substantial copper-finned cooler mounted directly over the GPU and 2ns "DDR-2 type" RAM. There is a copper heatsink mounted to the back of the card as well. As you may already know, the GeForce FX 5800 Ultra runs at two different speeds, 300MHz core / 600MHz memory when in 2D Mode, and 500MHz core / 1000MHz memory when running 3D applications. Leadtek's cooling solution handled these clock speeds without a problem. As you'll see a little later, core temperatures remained well within acceptable limits even after hours of benchmarking."
On Jul-03-20 at 14:49:42 PDT, seller added the following information:I did my best to identify this card, since it is lacking markings.
As a few have questioned, I must admit that I cannot determine and prove whether this is a 5800 or a 5800 Ultra.Both cards were produced using the exact same NV30 chip--just sorted and binned differently.The 5800 was produced running at 400/800MHz default.The 5800 Ultra ran at 500/1000MHz default.
The nvidia settings lets you set this card to 500/1000MHz and it runs just fine and stays very cool due to its massive heat spreader and double fans ( a more vigourous cooling solution than the 5800 ultra design configuration that most nvidia partners produced).Even if this is "just" a 5800 and not an Ultra I'm confident you can get the same performance out of it.