Graphics Card Upgrade for Aspire TC-605 questions

smeckledorfed
smeckledorfed Member Posts: 3 New User
edited March 2024 in 2020 Archives
I am very new to PC customization so I have some questions if anyone can answer them.

So I know that the PC has an available slot for a new graphics card but I just don't know what kind to buy. It has the default, Intel HD Graphics 4600, which wasn't that great for gaming even when I bought it back in 2013. Also I've read that I might need a new power supply to support the graphics card. Is that true, and if so, how do I know how much more power I need?

Very noob questions I know, so if anyone can help that would be greatly appreciated!

Answers

  • billsey
    billsey ACE Posts: 35,102 Trailblazer
    Most of the modern GPU cards have the power requirements in their spec sheets. It's not unusual for them to spec 500W, 650W or higher with the bigger cards. The TC-605 came originally with Windows 8 so it's got a UEFI BIOS in it, so you shouldn't have to worry about issues that arise from installing a modern card in a legacy BIOS system. So there are a couple of questions you need to answer and you'll be good to go. First, how much money do you want to spend? Second, how much room do you have in the case? If you have the cash to get a really high end card, I'd skip that and buy a new system with a nearly high end card, new systems are a lot faster than yours. :) I'd also suggest that in addition to a new graphics card look at investing in a SSD for your drive. Booting from a SSD is so very much faster!
    Click on "Like" if you find my answer useful or click on "Yes" if it answers your question.
  • smeckledorfed
    smeckledorfed Member Posts: 3 New User
    I'm looking to spend up to $150 and I'm not sure how much room is in my case. I'm sure I don't have the kind of money for a new system right now lol.
  • smeckledorfed
    smeckledorfed Member Posts: 3 New User
    billsey said:
    Most of the modern GPU cards have the power requirements in their spec sheets. It's not unusual for them to spec 500W, 650W or higher with the bigger cards. The TC-605 came originally with Windows 8 so it's got a UEFI BIOS in it, so you shouldn't have to worry about issues that arise from installing a modern card in a legacy BIOS system. So there are a couple of questions you need to answer and you'll be good to go. First, how much money do you want to spend? Second, how much room do you have in the case? If you have the cash to get a really high end card, I'd skip that and buy a new system with a nearly high end card, new systems are a lot faster than yours. :) I'd also suggest that in addition to a new graphics card look at investing in a SSD for your drive. Booting from a SSD is so very much faster!

    Do you think this would be a decent graphics card to buy? Thanks for the help.


  • billsey
    billsey ACE Posts: 35,102 Trailblazer
    I would personally go with a little lower end card and use the excess from your budget to put a SSD in, even if only used for booting and the C: drive. Move all your data to the old HDD and keep the C: nice and lean. Find a GPU that's about half the cost of that one and plan on a system upgrade in a couple of years. It'll be so much faster with both the SSD and GPU.
    Click on "Like" if you find my answer useful or click on "Yes" if it answers your question.