Amd 1650: AMD RX 570 vs Nvidia GTX 1650

Nvidia GeForce GTX 1650 Super vs AMD Radeon RX 6500 XT: Sub-$200 GPU Face-Off

(Image credit: Shutterstock)

Last year, it was nearly impossible to find reasonable prices on the best graphics cards, never mind finding anything that would qualify as a «budget» or cheap option. The GeForce GTX 1650 Super and Radeon RX 6500 XT we’re looking at today basically weren’t available in 2021, despite the former having launched in late 2019 — it was selling for as much as $350, according to our historical GPU pricing data.

2022 has thankfully brought an end to the GPU drought, and AMD’s Navi 24 cards are selling for less than their official MSRPs. The RX 6500 XT can be had for as little as $180 , and the GTX 1650 Super is back in stock as well, at least in some places — the EVGA 1650 Super SC goes for around $200 now, at Amazon and Newegg as well. Which means we can put these two sub-$200 graphics cards up against each other to see which cheap GPU is the better choice.

We’ll look at performance, price, features and tech, drivers and software, and power and efficiency in order to determine a winner. Those categories are listed in order of decreasing importance, in our view at least, so we’ll start with the critical aspects and move on down the list from there.

Gaming Performance: GTX 1650 Super vs RX 6500 XT

Gaming remains the main draw for graphics cards, though they can also help with video encoding and other tasks — or at least some of them can. Budget GPUs aren’t intended for high-resolution gaming, instead delivering performance similar to previous-generation midrange and high-end GPUs at substantially lower prices. We put the GTX 1650 Super and RX 6500 XT to the test with our updated 8-game test suite, looking at three different settings and resolution combinations.

1080p gaming is the real target for these cards, though some lighter games might manage 1440p at lower quality settings. 1440p ultra obviously pushes things too far, with sub-30 fps performance in most of the games we tested. So let’s just ignore the 1440p ultra numbers and focus on 1080p performance.

It’s a bit of a mixed bag, with wild swings in relative performance, depending on the game. Overall performance at 1080p medium basically ended up a tie, with the GTX 1650 Super holding a negligible 2% lead. In the individual games, the 1650 Super was anywhere from 4% slower (Borderlands 3) to a whopping 31% faster (Total War: Warhammer 3). But for the most part, the two provided a comparable experience.

Bumping the quality settings from medium to ultra creates problems in several of the games, which start to use more than the 4GB of VRAM that’s available on these GPUs. Forza Horizon 5, Red Dead Redemption 2, Total War: Warhammer 3, and Watch Dogs Legion all see performance basically cut in half, sometimes more. Most of the games remained playable, meaning 30 fps or more, but TWW3 and WDL both dropped below that mark.

Technically, AMD’s RX 6500 XT has the advantage of also supporting DXR (DirectX Raytracing), which the GTX 1650 Super fails to run (you need a 6GB GTX 10- or 16-series GPU for limited DXR support). However, performance in DXR games on the 6500 XT, even at 1080p medium, is typically so slow as to be meaningless. In our 6-game DXR test suite, the RX 6500 XT averaged 13.5 fps and failed to run Control (which requires 6GB or more to enable DXR). Fortnite was the best result, at 20 fps, while a couple of the games didn’t even break 10 fps. Don’t bother, in other words.

It’s interesting what AMD is able to do with significantly less memory bandwidth, even with a relatively small 16MB Infinity Cache. The RX 6500 XT has just 144 GB/s of bandwidth, compared to 192 GB/s for the GTX 1650 Super, due to the 64-bit memory bus on Navi 24. However, the 232 GB/s of Infinity Cache bandwidth basically makes up the difference, most of the time. It starts to fall short at ultra settings, but those mostly aren’t playable anyway.

Incidentally, while we’re only showing average fps, the 99th percentile lows are mostly the same story, except Nvidia’s lead is slightly larger. Overall, the GTX 1650 Super was 4. 9% faster on minimum fps at 1080p medium, 10.0% faster at 1080p ultra, and 43.7% faster at 1440p ultra. In other words, the framerate consistency was slightly worse on the RX 6500 XT.

While the performance might look like a tie, that’s using a modern test system that supports the PCIe 4.0 interface. We also tested RX 6500 XT with PCIe 3.0 speeds, and performance dropped by 9% overall, but there were instances where it was up to 40% slower. Testing the GTX 1650 Super on the same two PCs showed a 2% improvement in performance on the older Core i9-9900K system, so the drop in AMD performance can safely be attributed to the PCIe interface and platform. That gives Nvidia the overall lead for this category.

Winner: Nvidia GTX 1650 Super

Nvidia came out ahead at all three tested settings and resolutions, using a modern test PC. 1080p medium performance was pretty much tied, and we could throw AMD a bone for its ray tracing hardware. However, for budget hardware, we feel there’s a far greater chance these cards will end up in a PC that doesn’t support PCIe 4. 0, which means Nvidia gets the lead. Neither one of these GPUs are particularly potent, of course. You’re getting the equivalent of an RX 580 8GB (but with less VRAM), or a bit faster than a GTX 980, half a decade after those GPUs were in their prime.

Price: GTX 1650 Super vs RX 6500 XT

(Image credit: Shutterstock)

Prices have been all over the place for most of the past two years, though the RX 6500 XT only launched back in January 2022. The GTX 1650 Super originally debuted with a price of just $159 in 2019, and it was an excellent value at the time. Prices trended upward in 2020, and then spiked horrifically in 2021 when the GPU shortages and pandemic-influenced supply chain issues were at their worst. Even now, nearly three years after its launch, the lowest prices on the GTX 1650 Super are still $200.

Unless you’re willing to take a chance with a used card, which changes things up slightly. The GTX 1650 Super can be had for around $130 on eBay , while the RX 6500 XT starts at around $150 . Both of those prices are very much estimates, as eBay shows far more fluctuations than retail stores. Plus, buying a used graphics card represents a risk. The good news is that neither of these GPUs would have been a great option for mining purposes, due to having only 4GB of memory, so they probably weren’t run into the ground by their former owners.

What’s not clear is whether Nvidia is still actively producing the TU116 chips that sit at the heart of the GTX 1650 Super. It hasn’t officially discontinued production as far as we’re aware, but the supply of budget-friendly GTX 16-series cards hasn’t been all that great for a while now. The RTX 3050 meanwhile represents a large step up in price, performance, and features, so Nvidia doesn’t have a direct replacement for the GTX 1650 Super. And no, the GTX 1630 is not the GPU you’re looking for [waves hand].

Winner: AMD Radeon RX 6500 XT

Retail pricing trumps eBay pricing, and right now you save $20 by going with the AMD RX 6500 XT. Unless Nvidia starts providing a steady supply of TU116 chips — for the GTX 1650 Super as well as the GTX 1660 and GTX 1660 Super — AMD will likely maintain its modest pricing advantage.

Features and Technology: GTX 1650 Super vs RX 6500 XT

Normally, newer GPU architectures come with additional features. AMD’s Navi 24 and Nvidia’s GTX 16-series represent an exception to that rule, in different ways.

Despite using the Turing architecture, the GTX 1650 Super doesn’t support ray tracing or DLSS — two of the biggest additions to Turing. It does support the improved Turing NVENC hardware, which promises higher quality streaming encodes with less of a hit on gaming performance, however, which does beat Navi 24.

AMD’s Navi 24 GPU meanwhile represents some serious cuts to the basic RDNA 2 architecture feature set. There’s no video encoding hardware, only video decoding hardware. The PCIe interface also gets trimmed to just an x4 link, which despite being PCIe 4. 0 capable still has half the potential throughput as the GTX 1650 Super’s PCIe 3.0 x16 interface. It’s also limited to two display outputs, typically one HDMI 2.1 and one DisplayPort 1.4.

The one major feature AMD supports with RX 6500 XT that Nvidia does not is ray tracing, but as noted earlier, it’s much more of a checkbox feature than something most people would consider using. Other competing features are mostly comparable, like G-Sync vs FreeSync, Reflex vs Anti-Lag, etc. You get the same amount of memory (4GB), and both GPUs require a 6-pin (or sometimes 8-pin) power connection.

Winner: Nvidia GTX 1650 Super 

We said in our initial review that Navi 24 represented too many cuts to the basic feature set. A 64-bit memory interface, x4 PCIe interface, and no encoding hardware make this a GPU that feels more like something from five years ago. Sure, there’s RT hardware, but it’s only a token effort and is largely useless with only 4GB of memory. This is a close call, but ultimately we give Nvidia a slight edge.

Drivers and Software: GTX 1650 Super vs RX 6500 XT

AMD and Nvidia release regular driver updates for their GPUs. In AMD’s case, the company typically drops larger annual overhauls of its Radeon drivers, but the biggest changes in the past couple of years have focused on improving DirectX 11 performance in a few cases, and cleaning up bugs. Most major game launches tend to see AMD Game Ready drivers, though not necessarily WHQL certified drivers.

Nvidia maintains a similar release schedule for its GeForce drivers. It doesn’t always have a monthly driver update, but you can count on having Game Ready Drivers on launch day for most major game releases. Nearly every Nvidia driver (outside the occasional hotfix) is WHQL certified. It’s an extra step, though in practice we’re not sure how much it really matters — we’ve seen UI bugs and other issues still slip through the WHQL process.

AMD and Nvidia have different approaches to their driver user interfaces. Nvidia splits its GeForce driver options into two applications. Nvidia Control Panel handles the GPU settings, such as resolution, texture filtering, vertical sync, low latency mode, power management, and more. The control panel also handles display configuration settings, such as color, rotation, and multi-display setups. Nvidia GeForce Experience handles game settings, driver updates, and includes game streaming and recording features as well as performance tuning options. To access the GeForce Experience features, you must log in with an Nvidia user account.

AMD takes a somewhat more streamlined approach in that the Radeon driver software is a one-stop-shop for all your Radeon GPU settings and features. The Radeon Adrenaline 2022 software suite includes automatic driver updates, game performance profiles, built-in broadcasting software to stream and record your gameplay, and performance metrics and overclocking options.

Winner: Tie

Both Nvidia and AMD have different advantages with their drivers and accompanying software, but they offer generally equivalent experiences. Driver updates come on a regular basis, and both companies are well versed in testing and tuning their drivers to extract good gaming performance. Nvidia might do a bit better on a selection of less popular games, but we already gave it the performance category so we’re calling this a tie.

Power Consumption / Efficiency: GTX 1650 Super vs RX 6500 XT

(Image credit: Shutterstock)

The GTX 1650 Super and RX 6500 XT aren’t particularly demanding cards, with official TBP (typical board power) ratings of 100W and 107W, respectively. As you can guess, real-world testing might show some minor differences, but any decent power supply should prove sufficient for these GPUs.

Some models might have a larger factory overclock and require an 8-pin connector, and all cards will need at least a 6-pin connector. That’s enough for the card to use up to 150W (75W from the 6-pin and 75W from the PCIe slot), and even the largest factory overclocks are unlikely to push things that far. 2 chip size (though a decent chunk of the TU116 chip is disabled on this card). But lower clock speeds and other architectural differences come into play, and ultimately power draw ends up being very similar.

Winner: Tie

A difference of 5–10W in real-world use cases basically doesn’t matter, when both cards have the same PSU connectivity requirements. 100W of power, give or take, means your graphics card shouldn’t need a massive cooler with lots of fans, and the fans should spin at relatively low speeds, leading to a quiet PC overall.

(Image credit: Shutterstock)

Overall Winner: Nvidia GTX 1650 Super

The Radeon RX 6500 XT and GeForce GTX 1650 Super are relatively well matched cards. Frankly, that’s more than a little surprising, considering the GTX 1650 Super is now almost three years old, while the RX 6500 XT hasn’t even reached its first birthday yet. But AMD originally intended the Navi 24 GPU for mobile solutions, which means it would typically be paired with integrated graphics solutions that would provide some extra features.

That proves to be a limiting factor overall. If you want to save $20, certainly AMD deserves some thought. However, at $200 even, with features like video encoding (live streaming) support and slightly better performance in the majority of games, plus the ability to use the GTX 1650 Super with older PCIe 3.0 systems without tanking performance, Nvidia comes out ahead.

That’s not to say the RX 6500 XT couldn’t work just fine for a lot of people, but the same goes for the GTX 1650 Super. Frankly, we’d be more inclined to try and step up to the next level of performance and features, with the Radeon RX 6600 and GeForce RTX 3050 — or even the GeForce GTX 1660 Super. But that might be too big of a step for many wallets. GPU prices continue to fall, but Nvidia’s «budget Ampere» cards still sell well above MSRP.

Pricing and relative performance are the key factors. Right now, the RX 6500 XT and GTX 1650 Super go head to head, but if the AMD card gets cheaper or supplies of the GTX 1650 Super dry up and prices increase, things could quickly change. Availability of older GTX 16-series has become somewhat unreliable, so if the GTX 1650 Super fades away and the GTX 1650 has to take its place in the sub-$200 market, RX 6500 XT would easily take the performance crown — and the GTX 1630 is laughable by comparison.

Despite the age of the GTX 1650 Super, we also don’t expect a serious replacement to arrive any time soon from Team Green. AMD’s RX 6500 XT is too new to need a replacement as well. That means even though next-generation Nvidia Ada and AMD RDNA 3 GPUs are on the horizon, it might be some time before the budget gets any love. 

  • MORE: Best Graphics Cards
  • MORE: GPU Benchmarks and Hierarchy
  • MORE: All Graphics Content

Get instant access to breaking news, in-depth reviews and helpful tips.

Contact me with news and offers from other Future brandsReceive email from us on behalf of our trusted partners or sponsors

Jarred Walton is a senior editor at Tom’s Hardware focusing on everything GPU. He has been working as a tech journalist since 2004, writing for AnandTech, Maximum PC, and PC Gamer. From the first S3 Virge ‘3D decelerators’ to today’s GPUs, Jarred keeps up with all the latest graphics trends and is the one to ask about game performance.

Topics

Graphics

NVIDIA GTX 1650 Super vs AMD RX 5500 XT: Which one Should you Buy?

NVIDIA launched the GeForce GTX 1650 Super to address the shortcomings of the vanilla 1650. The Super was faster than both the RX 570 as well as the GTX 1060. AMD’s answer was the Radeon RX 5500 XT. Initially, the 8GB variant was priced the same as the GeForce GTX 1660, making it a hard pass, while the 4GB model costed the same as the GTX 1650 Super. Recently, however, AMD has started phasing out the latter in favor of the former with reduced pricing. Now, you can snag the Radeon RX 5500 XT 8GB for as low as $179, the same as the GTX 1650 Super which is limited to half as much memory.

Zotac GTX 1650 Super (review here)

Before we dive into the benchmarks and other details, let’s have a look at the specifications:

GTX 1650 Super 4GB Radeon RX 5500 XT 4GB
Cores 1280 1408
Boost Clock 1725MHz 1845MHz
Memory 4GB GDDR6 4GB GDDR6
TGP 100W 130W
Price $169 $179

AMD claims that the RX 5500 XT (8GB) is ~15-20% faster than the GTX 1650 Super, all the while offering twice as much VRAM for running the latest games with ultra textures.

This 10-game benchmark test suite should give you a better idea of where the two 1080p graphics cards stand with respect to one another.

Test Bench

  • CPU: AMD Ryzen 7 3700X
  • Motherboard: ASRock X570 Taichi
  • Memory: Trident Z Royal 8GB x 2 @ 3600 MHz
  • HDD: WD Black 4TB
  • PSU: Corsair HX1000i

AMD Radeon RX 5500 XT vs NVIDIA GeForce GTX 1650 Super: Gaming and Benchmarks

The Radeon RX 5500 XT manages to beat the 1650 Super in just about every game from Assassins’ Creed to Metro Exodus. AMD favored titles like Red Dead Redemption, Deus Ex and Borderlands 2 see the Radeon RX 5500 XT ahead by as much as 25 FPS. The surprising part is that even in RTX (NVIDIA sponsored titles) like Metro and Tomb Raider, the GeForce 1650 Super lags by a notable margin.

Another important point to note here is that the 1650 Super has just 4GB of memory. Yet, at 1080p we saw almost no stuttering or VRAM bottleneck whatsoever, with the frame times of the two GPUs showing similar trends. Have a look at the sustained FPS graphs in two of the most demanding titles:

In Borderlands 3, both the cards show similar performance with drops and spikes in the same places. The 1650 Super is a good 10 FPS slower for the most part of the test.

The Metro Exodus benchmark is more interesting. Although the Radeon RX 5500 XT is faster by around 5 FPS for the majority of the duration, towards the end of the benchmark, the GeForce card seems to have a clear advantage.

Thermals and Overclocking

In terms of overclocking, like the rest of the Turing Supers, the 1650 S fares much better than the RX 5500 XT. We were able to add +200 to the core and +800 to the memory. The RX 5500 XT, on the other hand, could only take +100 on the core and a puny +50 on the memory.

The RX 5500 XT barely gains any additional ground upon overclocking with a maximum boost of 5% in Deus Ex. The 1650 S, on the other hand, sees a sizeable uplift of more than 15%, beating both the stock as well as overclocked 5500XT in The Division 2 and somewhat alleviating the deltas in Deus Ex.

This extra performance, however, does come at an increased thermal output:

While the 1650 Super sees a temperature surge of almost 5 degrees to 77°C, the 5500 XT is barely affected with a max GPU temp of 73. Don’t compare the hot-spot temp as that’s different from the GPU temp reported by the GeForce driver. As you can see, the 100W ceiling of the 1650 S is a clear hindrance here. The card runs into a hard power bottleneck. I suspect this was done deliberately to prevent the cannibalization of the GTX 1660.

Conclusion

The RX 5500 XT is the clear winner here. It maintains notably higher frame rates than the GTX 1650 Super across all ten games tested, all the while costing less. The gap swells to a significant 20-30% in the Navi favored titles in line with AMD’s official figures.

Drum Cet CET7851 (MK410-Drum) for Kyocera KM-1620/1650/2020/2050 150000str. 10mm sleeve — 1392560

  • Laptops and tablets

  • PC accessories

  • nine0004 Periphery

  • Network equipment

  • Consumables

  • nine0004 Televisions and media

  • Portable electronics

  • Household appliances

  • nine0004 Auto goods

  • Tools and equipment

  • Sports, recreation, hobbies

Home > Catalog >
Consumables >
Spare parts for office equipment repair >
Spare parts for office equipment repair

Drum Cet CET7851 (MK410-Drum) for Kyocera KM-1620/1650/2020/2050 150000pp.

10mm sleeve


nine0055 On request

Product code: 1392560
Manufacturer: CET
Manufacturer code: CET7851
Availability:

Price: 2830 ₽

The price is indicated when buying for cash.
The offer is not a public offer.


Features

nine0059

nine0055 10mm sleeve

EAN code 6946326578516
Type Drum
Printer manufacturer KYOCERA
Compatible KM-1620/1650/2020/2050
Resource, pages 150000
Additional features
OE Model MK410-Drum

Attention! The appearance of the goods, equipment and characteristics may be changed by the manufacturer without prior notice.

Check the declared characteristics on the official websites of manufacturers.

How many euros in 1650 Armenian drams at the exchange rate of the Central Bank for today

  1. Exchange rates
  2. Armenian dram to euro exchange rate
  3. 1650 AMD to EUR

1 650 դր. = 2.61 €

One thousand six hundred and fifty Armenian drams (1,650 դր.) is two euros sixty one euro cents (2 euros 61 cents) at the real market rate on 04/25/2021 20:00 Moscow time (04/25/2021 17:00 UTC ).

Reverse transfer — 1650 EUR in AMD

To convert another amount of Armenian drams to euros, enter the required amount in the form and click Convert
nine0005

Quantity

From

RUB / Russian rubleUSD / US dollarEUR / EuroUAH / Ukrainian hryvniaBYN / Belarusian rubleKZT / Kazakhstani tengeAUD / Australian dollarAZN / Azerbaijan manatGBP / Pound sterlingAMD / Armenian dramBGN / Bulgarian levBRL / Brazilian realHUF / Hungarian forintDKK / Danish kroonCAD Canadian DollarKGS / Kyrgyzstani SomCNY / Chinese YuanMDL / Moldovan LeuNOK / Norwegian KronePLN / Polish ZlotyRON / Romanian LeuSGD / Singapore DollarTJS / Tajikistani SomoniTRY / Turkish LiraTMT / Turkmen ManatUZS / Uzbek SumCZK / Czech KorunaSEK / Swedish KronaCHF / Swiss FrancJPYK / Japanese yen

RUB / Russian rubleUSD / US dollarEUR / EuroUAH / Ukrainian hryvniaBYN / Belarusian rubleKZT / Kazakhstani tengeAUD / Australian dollarAZN / Azerbaijani manatGBP / Pound sterlingAMD / Armenian dramBGN / Bulgarian levBRL / Brazilian realHUF / Hungarian forintDKK / Danish croupeeCAD Canadian DollarKGS / Kyrgyzstani SomCNY / Chinese YuanMDL / Moldovan LeuNOK / Norwegian KronePLN / Polish ZlotyRON / Romanian LeuSGD / Singapore DollarTJS / Tajikistani SomoniTRY / Turkish LiraTMT / Turkmen ManatUZS / Uzbek SumCZK / Czech KorunaSEK / Swedish KronaCHF / Swiss FrancJPYK / Japanese yen

Amount of euros when exchanging AMD 1650

Calculation at the real market rate for the last 24 hours

MSK time 1650 դր. Difference with the previous exchange rate
25.04.2021 20:00 2.61 € ▼ -0.00003
nine0056
04/25/2021 19:00 2.61 € 0.00000
04/25/2021 18:00 2.61 € ▲ 0.00003
25.04.2021 17:00 2.61 € ▼ -0.00002
nine0056
25.04.2021 16:00 2.61 € ▲ 0.00007
25.04.2021 15:00 2.61 € ▲ 0. 00002
25.04.2021 14:00 2.61 € ▲ 0.00010
nine0056
25.04.2021 13:00 2.61 € ▼ -0.00003
04/25/2021 12:00 2.61 € ▼ -0.00002
04/25/2021 11:00 2.61 € ▼ -0.00005
nine0056
04/25/2021 10:00 2.61 € ▲ 0.00002
04/25/2021 09:00 2.61 € ▼ -0.0001
04/25/2021 08:00 2. 61 € ▲ 0.00005
nine0056
04/25/2021 07:00 2.61 € ▼ -0.0001
04/25/2021 06:00 2.61 € ▲ 0.0001
04/25/2021 05:00 2.61 € ▲ 0.00005
nine0056
04/25/2021 04:00 2.61 € ▼ -0.00008
04/25/2021 03:00 2.61 € ▲ 0.00002
04/25/2021 02:00 2.61 € ▼ -0.

2024 © All rights reserved