Ok, you will need to consider many factors as you have noted; including things like case size as it is possible to buy a card that won't fit into your machine.
Here is a general walkthrough: pcworld.com/article/225823/how_to_upgrade_your_graphics_card.html
I would recommend letting a professional do this if you are not comfortable. I have worked in IT for years and feel most comfortable simply in buying a new machine when multiple components need upgrading. I'm currently running smoothly on an i7 with 16GB RAM and an Nvidia 780 graphics card.
In addition to making sure you have enough room in your machine, you will definitely need to ensure that PSU is up to par; the PSU requirements and slot compatibility (such as PCIx) will be listed on the box for your component. Don't buy used! Always new.
Your graphics card is fairly old; you can see some good comparisons here:
videocardbenchmark.net/
For learning about choosing a card:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4qdRm3KkGV8
For doing the work:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=O9x097QRXeA
Dell has a tendancy to give you crappiest of smallest of power supplies. You need to find out what your PSU can handle before shoving a video card in there...
Then you will need a new graphics card, or adapt to the lower frame rates. And maybe a new CPU/Motherboard.glamorousskies wrote: »no i like to play only on high.
From what I've read this machine will be difficult to upgrade; however at a minimum you will need to determine how powerful your PSU is before you can safely select a card. Try finding the make and model of the PSU.glamorousskies wrote: »Could you direct me to a replacement graphics card that would be 100$ or less that would fit in the same graphics card slot as the one i have. That would be very appreciated.
I must abstain from recommendations as I am not into AMD/Radeon. I am more of an intel/nvidia guy.
But there is nothing wrong with AMD, it just is not something I am skilled enough to speak of.
At the very least you will probably need a bigger power supply for that. It might be cheaper to buy a new system than to upgrade that one.glamorousskies wrote: »Could you direct me to a replacement graphics card that would be 100$ or less that would fit in the same graphics card slot as the one i have. That would be very appreciated.
SadisticSavior wrote: »At the very least you will probably need a bigger power supply for that. It might be cheaper to buy a new system than to upgrade that one.glamorousskies wrote: »Could you direct me to a replacement graphics card that would be 100$ or less that would fit in the same graphics card slot as the one i have. That would be very appreciated.
I have a Radeon HD7770 and it handle high settings very well. I also have a 6-core FX processor, so I am not sure how much that is adding to it. I've been told this game is CPU intensive though. Thats why I said you might have to upgrade your CPU as well.
SadisticSavior wrote: »At the very least you will probably need a bigger power supply for that. It might be cheaper to buy a new system than to upgrade that one.glamorousskies wrote: »Could you direct me to a replacement graphics card that would be 100$ or less that would fit in the same graphics card slot as the one i have. That would be very appreciated.
I have a Radeon HD7770 and it handle high settings very well. I also have a 6-core FX processor, so I am not sure how much that is adding to it. I've been told this game is CPU intensive though. Thats why I said you might have to upgrade your CPU as well.
Again, I dont know the equivalent is to the card you have, because you have a Radeon (I know my limits and dont want to give crap info).
Plus you need your Power Supply wattage..
glamorousskies wrote: »you keep saying i might need to upgrade my cpu. what do you mean by that. how good is my current cpu or how do i find out?
SadisticSavior wrote: »glamorousskies wrote: »you keep saying i might need to upgrade my cpu. what do you mean by that. how good is my current cpu or how do i find out?
I looked it up online and it actually seems close to the one I have, so the CPU is probably not the problem. It is probably the Graphics card.
Your CPU (at least I am assuming this is it): http://www.cpubenchmark.net/cpu.php?cpu=AMD+Phenom+II+X6+1055T
My CPU: http://www.cpubenchmark.net/cpu.php?cpu=AMD+FX-6100+Six-Core
That being said, you are still back to square one. It is likely whatever Graphics card you upgrade to will need more power. From what I can tell your power supply is 450 watts...most modern cards will probably need at least 500 watts.
We can't tell you specifically based on the information you provided. We can only give you a best guess.glamorousskies wrote: »I understand everyone is trying to help but no one is being direct. Look, the situation is i have laid out all of my info. I am now asking that BASED on that info, what video card slot do i have?
SadisticSavior wrote: »We can't tell you specifically based on the information you provided. We can only give you a best guess.glamorousskies wrote: »I understand everyone is trying to help but no one is being direct. Look, the situation is i have laid out all of my info. I am now asking that BASED on that info, what video card slot do i have?
Based on what I could find online:
http://en.community.dell.com/support-forums/desktop/f/3514/p/19333154/19699802.aspx
...it looks like you have a PCIe (version 2) slot. Make sure whatever video card you buy will fit that slot.
Assuming you do have a PCIe (2) slot, all you need to worry about is your power supply. Make sure whatever card you get has a recommended power supply of 450watts or less. Looks like a Radeon 7750 will work - http://www.tomshardware.com/answers/id-1761731/300w-power-supply-handle-msi-radeon-7750-2gb-graphics-card.html
SadisticSavior wrote: »We can't tell you specifically based on the information you provided. We can only give you a best guess.glamorousskies wrote: »I understand everyone is trying to help but no one is being direct. Look, the situation is i have laid out all of my info. I am now asking that BASED on that info, what video card slot do i have?
Based on what I could find online:
http://en.community.dell.com/support-forums/desktop/f/3514/p/19333154/19699802.aspx
...it looks like you have a PCIe (version 2) slot. Make sure whatever video card you buy will fit that slot.
Assuming you do have a PCIe (2) slot, all you need to worry about is your power supply. Make sure whatever card you get has a recommended power supply of 450watts or less. Looks like a Radeon 7750 will work - http://www.tomshardware.com/answers/id-1761731/300w-power-supply-handle-msi-radeon-7750-2gb-graphics-card.html
i gotta open the comp up right? also can someone tell me what type of card the ati radeon 5670 is based on looking it up? is it a pci express 2.0? What type of card is ati radeon 5670? What is that? pci express 2?
If you follow those links I posted above, that is why I am assuming you have a 450w supply. Those links are talking about a Dell studio xps 7100.glamorousskies wrote: »so based on you taking accurate guesses. You're assuming i have a 450 watt power supply?
If you open the box and look on it, it should tell you somewhere how many watts it is.glamorousskies wrote: »And how can i check my power supply again?
From what I can tell, you have a PCIe 2.0 slot in your system. I think the Radeon 7750 will fit that. It is technically a PCIe 3.0 card, but from what I understand, that only affects your maximum resolution. But I have never tried to use a PCIe 3.0 card in a 2.0 slot.glamorousskies wrote: »if i get the radeon 7750 does that have the pci 2 slot just like mine does?
Doubt it. If it works at all (according to the link above it should), your current drivers should still recognize it. Radeon cards use unified drivers now. One driver works for all cards in that class.glamorousskies wrote: »if i buy the radeon 7750 will i need to do anything different then the current card i have right now?
Yes. You should not need any adapters (except maybe an adapter for the monitor cable, but those are cheap).glamorousskies wrote: »is it just a card and i will take the old one out and put the 7750 in
It is a 3.0 card. But as I said in the last post, it appears they are compatible with version 2.0 slots.glamorousskies wrote: »also the radeon 7750 isn't a pci 2 slot is it?