Final Words

Bringing things to a conclusion, when Ganesh and I began working on reviewing the Zotac GeForce GT 640 DDR3 we set out with two cards and two different goals. I would take a look at gaming performance and physical characteristics while Ganesh would be free to focus on the HTPC side of things. Unsurprisingly we have come to two very different conclusions.

From a gaming standpoint the GeForce GT 640 is unremarkable if not flat-out bad. NVIDIA’s GK107 GPU may have a lot of performance potential, but its first desktop iteration as the GeForce GT 640 DDR3 does not. The decision to equip it with DDR3 clearly bottlenecks the card just as it has done to previous generation entry-level cards. So this is by no means a new problem, but it’s a recurring problem that always has the same solution: buy GDDR5. With that said, NVIDIA and their partners will no doubt sell GT 640 DDR3 cards by the truckload – make no mistake, having lots of VRAM moves lots of cards – but if you’re fortunate enough to be reading this article then you’re probably well aware of the performance difference between DDR3 and GDDR5.

As a result of the decision to equip the GT 640 with DDR3, compared to every other major card around $109 including the 7750, 5750, GTS 450, and GTX 550 Ti, the GT 640 is the slower card and typically by quite a bit.  Even if we look at the much narrower range of sub-75W cards, AMD’s 7750 has the clear upper hand in gaming performance. As it stands there’s just no good reason to get a GeForce GT 640 if you intend to game on it. A Radeon HD 7750 performs far better for the same price and effectively the same power consumption, and that’s really all there is to it.

This brings us to the second conclusion: HTPC usage. To some extent HTPC tasks are still reliant on memory bandwidth – post-processing in particular – but overall the measure of a good HTPC card is rooted in its features and power consumption rather than its raw performance. To that extent the GeForce GT 640 is nearly everything we expected from the moment we saw GK107. 4K video decoding via VP5 and 4K over HDMI are working, custom resolution/timings are working, there’s enough processing power to handle everything short of intensive madVR use-cases, and all of this is on a sub-75W card. While NVIDIA still has some room to grow and bugs to fix, at this point it’s certainly the best HTPC card we’ve tested yet.

Really the only thing we don’t have a good handle on for HTPC usage right now is video encoding through NVENC. We’ve already seen NVENC in action with beta-quality programs on the GTX 680, but at this point we’re waiting on retail programs to ship with support for both NVENC and VCE so that we can better evaluate how well these programs integrate into the HTPC experience along with evaluating the two encoders side-by-side. But for that it looks like we won’t have our answer until next month.

Wrapping things up I’d like to spend a few words on the Zotac GeForce GT 640 design in particular. Zotac has worked themselves into an interesting position as the only partner currently offering a single-slot card, and while the fan noise will probably drive some customers away it certainly fulfills its role well. Unfortunately for Zotac the mini-HDMI port problem we outlined earlier is a direct obstacle for the GT 640’s greatest strength: HTPC usage. It’s by no means an insurmountable problem, but it makes the Zotac card a poor out of the box HTPC product. Once Zotac resolves the issue they’re going to have among the finer HTPC cards available, but until then prospective HTPC customers will need to take extra care to mitigate the issue.

Power, Temperature, & Noise
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  • MrSpadge - Thursday, June 21, 2012 - link

    And they support newer features and cost significantly less to run. Still, the price is ridiculous, especially for DDR3.
  • Taft12 - Wednesday, June 20, 2012 - link

    "Zotac has worked themselves into an interesting position as the only partner currently offering a single-slot card"

    I think EVGA's launched even before Zotac. No blocked mini-HDMI port either!

    http://www.newegg.ca/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82...
  • nathanddrews - Wednesday, June 20, 2012 - link

    First off, I want to thank you for testing the 4K capabilities of this card. While disappointing that there is no DP output for 4K@60Hz, I suppose it's only a matter of time.

    Second, and more important, I wanted to make you aware of this in case you haven't seen it. Shot in 4K, edited in 4K, mastered in 4K and you can buy it in any format including Blu-ray (1080p), 2560x1440p, and even its raw 140GB 4K Cineform resolution. Seeing as how one of you awesome people now has the Sony 1000ES (jealous!), you definitely shouldn't waste time showing 4K YouTube clips!

    http://timescapes.org/products/default.aspx
    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=e-GYrbecb88
  • Hrel - Wednesday, June 20, 2012 - link

    I saw a GTX560 on newegg for 145bucks after MIR today. Whenever people ask me about gaming cards and say they don't want to spend much more than 100 bucks I say, cut back on coffee for a week or skip that night at the bars and just spend the extra 30 bucks or so. Makes absolutely NO sense to handicap yourself over 30 bucks. GTX560 FTW!!!
  • just4U - Thursday, June 21, 2012 - link

    That's pretty much where the 7750 comes in. Performance overall is fairly similiar. Plus you can do away with the confusion since the 560 comes in 4-5 different flavors, yes?
  • maroon1 - Saturday, June 23, 2012 - link

    What ?! GTX 560 is much faster than even HD7770.

    http://www.anandtech.com/show/5541/amd-radeon-hd-7...
  • Lolimaster - Wednesday, June 20, 2012 - link

    So slow that a 6670 feels like high end and 7750 a total monster. $109 for these joke of a gpu (gt640)? You must be trolling.
  • Lolimaster - Wednesday, June 20, 2012 - link

    A8 5800K is a tiny bit slow thatn 6670 so it should be faster (for free with the APU) than a $109 nvidia discrete gpu.
  • bhima - Wednesday, June 20, 2012 - link

    This card is horrible. I was initially unimpressed with AMD's 7750 and 7770 performance, but now those cards just look beastly compared to this. This should be a $50-60 card at max for that kind of performance. Hell I think my 540m performs almost as good as this card.
  • staryoshi - Wednesday, June 20, 2012 - link

    GDDR5 would have really lifted the performance of this card. I'm sure they went with GDDR3 as a cost-saving measure and to not canibalize the sale of other cards.. but at this price point it's not a compelling item at all for most.

    They really need to get the 28nm process under control and wrangle in pricing on this pup.

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