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ZOTAC GeForce GT 710 2GB DDR3 PCI-E2.0 DL-DVI VGA HDMI Passive Cooled Single Slot Low Profile Graphics Card (ZT-71302-20L) – For Sale – Price
$53.31 Original price was: $53.31.$53.28Current price is: $53.28.
Category: Computer Graphics Cards
Brand: ZOTAC
Description
Nvidia GeForce GT 710, 2GB DDR3 192 CUDA cores, 64-bit Memory Bus, 954 MHz engine Clock, 1600 MHz Memory Clock
Pci Express 2.0
Fanless cooling
Triple display support
Directx 12 (feature 11_0) API, OpenGL 4.5 supports for Windows 10/8/7/Vista/XP
Power Requirement: 300-watt power supply. 25-Watt Max power consumption
Package Content: ZT-71302-20L, Low profile I/O bracket, driver Disk, user Manual
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8 reviews for ZOTAC GeForce GT 710 2GB DDR3 PCI-E2.0 DL-DVI VGA HDMI Passive Cooled Single Slot Low Profile Graphics Card (ZT-71302-20L) – For Sale – Price
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Lucas –
THE choice PCIe x1 “display card”, as a backup, or in mining/hobby/emulator/etc. machines
This is the low-low-tier fanless, GDDR3, PCIe x1 card.Technical aspects from my experience, paired with Ryzen 5000 series (no CPU bottlenecks):-Compatible as expected on AM4 ASRock B450M HDV-4.0, and ASRock B550 Phantom Gaming 4/ac-Seems like modern production run, with continued driver support-Full UEFI/non-CSM/non-legacy compatible (i.e. Windows 11)-Core/RAM clock only in MSI Afterburner, no voltage or Power Limit control—Accepts +200-300mhz on both clocks. Basically stays inside 40-60C under any idle/load-Using this (or anything else) to display instead of main mining card, gave 1MH/s ethash rate increase (~28MH/s RX580)-No conflicts with active AMD and NVIDIA drivers+software.-Smooth 1080p60 Youtube and Twitch, issues with certain Twitch streams stuttering—Unsure, but possibly common Windows issue with multiple displays—Youtube strangely stutters at 720p or lower. 1080p only? lol-Similar general desktop/browser performance as a modern GDDR5 GPU-RX580 does have slightly better display clarity, and (vaguely so) system responsivenessWindows can only use one GPU for rendering (Display Settings –> Make this my main screen), so if you have 2 monitors plugged into 2 cards, the secondary screen/monitor pair will always have issues with refresh rate, latency, and stuttering. However, Path of Exile, which has an in-game GPU selector, was able to run normally on the RX580/”not main” monitor, while the Windows desktop+apps directly behind felt like a remote desktop connection.Don’t expect playability past DirectX 11 stuff and PSX era emulation. Not great Vulkan performance. From my limited testing:-Smooth, absolutely playable 60-80+fps in (1080p+high) Terraria and Celeste, (720p+low) L4D2 and HL2 era games-30+fps in 720p Path of Exile, PERFECT for running a trade-only 2nd account on a 2nd PC/VM instance (POEers, this is how you get Mirror rich)-CS:GO and Chivalry 2 barely function, crazy stuttering, <10fps-Runs AOC 24G2 (Freesync/"AMD"-branded) at true 1080p144hz over HDMI. 60hz setting produces clear mouse trails and skipping. No clue if games are actually displaying past 60fps, but no stuttering or tearing with VSYNC off.The reason I bought this: my PC froze while BIOS flashing my main gaming/mining RX580. I was getting 4 boots on beep, and no display from BIOS or Windows. I simply needed to reach Windows from another display source, with the RX580 active, in order to reflash. Despite having a spare x16 GPU, I needed the 1x, slot-power only GT 710 b/c:-Corrupt/unusable/unflashable 2nd physical bios on my used RX580, ("invalid VendorID")-My spare card needs 1 (of 2) PCIe connectors from the PSU--my RX580 uses and NEEDS both to activate-Spare card is null, b/c my MicroATX motherboard has only two PCIe slots (x16 and x1)-No integrated graphics, APU, or different systems availableFor this purpose, the card worked perfectly. Plugged in one monitor via HDMI to the GT 710. BIOS and Windows booted and displayed normally. The BIOS flashed perfectly and restored full function my RX580. I discovered that the PolarisSRB mining BIOS requires CSM/legacy mode active to post BIOS, otherwise it beeps, then goes straight to Windows login like normal (if fully flashed :D).With CSM off, GT 710 in, but monitor plugged only into RX 580, BIOS seems to be happy it found any card, and skips the dreaded beeps, accept DEL to enter settings etc., but simply doesn't display anything (out of the RX580), unless you plug a monitor into the GT 710.--Conclusion: I eventually upgrade most of my components, and built 2nd mining rig anyway that I only remotely access, so I could've returned the GT710, as a refund a refund on my $70 "fix". But I bought the warranty, and now it's always hooked up. I only switch monitor cables to the main GPU to game. Not the best solution, but dat average hashrate amirite?
Wes B. –
Small jack-knife GPU for troubleshooting or driving extra displays
I run a GTX 3090 with four monitors, but I recently bought a Valve Index which needs a dedicated DisplayPort connection. One of my existing monitors is just a TV running at 60hz which shows my OBS preview projector window, so I initially thought I’d enable the integrated graphics and use that. Unfortunately, despite my Motherboard having an integrated graphics port, my Ryzen 5950 does not support integrated graphics. Then I thought I’d grab a USB adapter and connect it to that to free up a DisplayPort slot. It worked, but unfortunately, the USB adapter sucked a lot of USB bandwidth and the “Windows Driver Foundation User Mode Host” process which drives the adapter was also guzzling CPU and GPU power disproportionately and causing blue screen crash issues (Windows Version10.0.19044 Build 19044).I pulled out a spare graphics card intending to stick it in, but was dismayed to find my only available slot was a PCIe x1 connection. After reading about problems with risers and not wanting to literally cut off some of the connector of my old GPU, I started looking around for x1 GPUs that would give me the one extra HDMI hookup I needed.I bought this sucker and stuck it in the x1 slot and it worked perfectly. No issues, no fuss. Doesn’t need a power hookup, has passive cooling, has an extremely small profile, and doesn’t add a ton of extra heat inside my case. I did have to go into my UEFI/BIOS settings and adjust which GPU would be the primary one for boot time.I also hopped over to the Nvidia control panel and ensured it was set to use the 3090 for PhysX settings — I wanted to make sure nothing was trying to use this card for heavy lifting. It has one job, to drive a low-demand display at 60hz 1080p, and it does that admirably.I’ve only been using this GPU for a few days, but it’s been stable and I’ve seen no tearing, lagging, or system instability. I already bought another to keep around as a troubleshooting card for desktop systems that are experiencing issues and need fixing — systems often have an x1 slot free but may not have integrated graphics, so I can slap one of these in and just cut the power to the main GPU without having to physically disconnect it. The small form factor and lack of external power hookup or fans are a godsend.
Black Rock Auto Inc –
Excellent for Standard 2d or Business Applications. Not designed for 3d Gaming. Good value.
I added this to my business computer which has onboard Intel HD Graphics but only supports 2 monitors. I found that the 2nd monitor would go black whenever the computer would go to sleep and I would have to restart the computer to get it to come back on. It slowed the computer down using onboard, so I added this because it can support 3 monitors.This is an excellent card for adding multi-monitors (up to 3 monitors at 1080p) to a desktop or server with a PCIe x1 slot. Keep in mind that PCIe x1 is a bottleneck. This is not a card for graphically intensive games or programs that involve intense 3d rendering. As long as you use this card for the express purpose for which it was designed, it works very well. If you have an old system without PCIe x16, this may be an option for upgrading video or at least adding multi-monitor support.It is certainly better than onboard graphics for a lot of systems. While it probably can run older games at lower resolutions, it would be better to upgrade your motherboard with one that supports PCIe x16 and use a higher end GPU card.That being said, I would recommend this card if your needs are like mine.
Miguel Angel –
La compré ya que me quedé sin dinero para comprar una 3060 ð¤ª. Creo que es una buena elección para darle un segundo aire a una PC antigua o para sacarte del apuro de terminar de armar una PC sencilla; obviamente sale más rentable un procesador de gráficos integrados para estos tiempos donde los precios de las gráficas están por la nubes, pero creo que la gt 710 es tu opción si haces trabajos o juegas videojuegos que no requieran demasiada carga gráfica.
Hosam a. –
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KC –
I am upgrading the CPU from first generation I3 (with built-in intel graphics) to I7 (no built in graphics). Didn’t realize the built-in Intel graphics and once I swapped in the CPU, machine refused to boot. Got this GPU for a try as the it is a SFF box with very limited space.With the I3 running in the box, first plugged the card in and with the VGA connected to the monitor and pretty much nothing happened (both in windows and in boot sequence). I connected the monitor back to the motherboard’s VGA port on the fly, was able to see Windows and the card was recognized as Microsoft Basic graphics card. Tried swapping the card back and forth the PCI 2x and the PCI 16x slot, same result with nothing comeing out the VGA port.Downloaded and installed the latest Geforce game ready drive, still nothing comeing out the VGA port, but at least the card is being recognized as the correct GPU. Out of the blue, I dug out an old DVI cable and connected it to the monitor, and it came on! I tried connecting the card between the PCI 2x and the PCI 16x slot on the motherboard, and the only difference I observed was that for PCI 16x slot, the on-board graphics port won’t turn on, but every time I do observe output from the DVI port. I was a bit too lazy to move a monitor that support HDMI to do the same test.With the card in the PCI 16x slot, I was able to finished my CPU upgrade and everything works perfectly.
shaaf –
It’s a good product low budget I bought it for temporary use until I get any 30 series gpu but works great till now
Aditya Labade –
This is one of the best Graphics Card out there for beginners and For those who want graphics card with lowest possible price!I have also Added Video clip of GTA VYou will get an idea of gameplay(smooth)Gta V runs smoothly on medium setting in 4kYou will require minimum ram of 8gb for handling of this graphics card in your pcWhen I installed it in my pcMy pc started hangging(4gb ram)After I installed more ram now its 8gbNow it does hang any moreIt also has fans for thermalSo no heating issueMax it can heat up is 50 degreeWhile extreme gaming(70+on paper)It can give output to 3 monitors simultaneouslyYou can run 4k videos on this very smoothlyIt also supports 3D (every graphics card does)We can add 3D hardware to pc and enjoy 3D movies,Pictures,Etc on normal monitor with this!Go For it If you have low budget it will not regret you for buying it!Review helps a lot for purchasing and I also was able to make this purchase by some kinda bad reviews and good reviewsBut this is nice graphics card go for It!!!