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Load image into Gallery viewer, ZOTAC GeForce GT 710 1GB DDR3 PCIE x 1 , DVI, HDMI, VGA, Low Profile Graphic Card (ZT-71304-20L)
Load image into Gallery viewer, ZOTAC GeForce GT 710 1GB DDR3 PCIE x 1 , DVI, HDMI, VGA, Low Profile Graphic Card (ZT-71304-20L)
Load image into Gallery viewer, ZOTAC GeForce GT 710 1GB DDR3 PCIE x 1 , DVI, HDMI, VGA, Low Profile Graphic Card (ZT-71304-20L)
Load image into Gallery viewer, ZOTAC GeForce GT 710 1GB DDR3 PCIE x 1 , DVI, HDMI, VGA, Low Profile Graphic Card (ZT-71304-20L)
Load image into Gallery viewer, ZOTAC GeForce GT 710 1GB DDR3 PCIE x 1 , DVI, HDMI, VGA, Low Profile Graphic Card (ZT-71304-20L)
Load image into Gallery viewer, ZOTAC GeForce GT 710 1GB DDR3 PCIE x 1 , DVI, HDMI, VGA, Low Profile Graphic Card (ZT-71304-20L)
Load image into Gallery viewer, ZOTAC GeForce GT 710 1GB DDR3 PCIE x 1 , DVI, HDMI, VGA, Low Profile Graphic Card (ZT-71304-20L)
Load image into Gallery viewer, ZOTAC GeForce GT 710 1GB DDR3 PCIE x 1 , DVI, HDMI, VGA, Low Profile Graphic Card (ZT-71304-20L)
Load image into Gallery viewer, ZOTAC GeForce GT 710 1GB DDR3 PCIE x 1 , DVI, HDMI, VGA, Low Profile Graphic Card (ZT-71304-20L)
  • Load image into Gallery viewer, ZOTAC GeForce GT 710 1GB DDR3 PCIE x 1 , DVI, HDMI, VGA, Low Profile Graphic Card (ZT-71304-20L)
  • Load image into Gallery viewer, ZOTAC GeForce GT 710 1GB DDR3 PCIE x 1 , DVI, HDMI, VGA, Low Profile Graphic Card (ZT-71304-20L)
  • Load image into Gallery viewer, ZOTAC GeForce GT 710 1GB DDR3 PCIE x 1 , DVI, HDMI, VGA, Low Profile Graphic Card (ZT-71304-20L)
  • Load image into Gallery viewer, ZOTAC GeForce GT 710 1GB DDR3 PCIE x 1 , DVI, HDMI, VGA, Low Profile Graphic Card (ZT-71304-20L)
  • Load image into Gallery viewer, ZOTAC GeForce GT 710 1GB DDR3 PCIE x 1 , DVI, HDMI, VGA, Low Profile Graphic Card (ZT-71304-20L)
  • Load image into Gallery viewer, ZOTAC GeForce GT 710 1GB DDR3 PCIE x 1 , DVI, HDMI, VGA, Low Profile Graphic Card (ZT-71304-20L)
  • Load image into Gallery viewer, ZOTAC GeForce GT 710 1GB DDR3 PCIE x 1 , DVI, HDMI, VGA, Low Profile Graphic Card (ZT-71304-20L)
  • Load image into Gallery viewer, ZOTAC GeForce GT 710 1GB DDR3 PCIE x 1 , DVI, HDMI, VGA, Low Profile Graphic Card (ZT-71304-20L)
  • Load image into Gallery viewer, ZOTAC GeForce GT 710 1GB DDR3 PCIE x 1 , DVI, HDMI, VGA, Low Profile Graphic Card (ZT-71304-20L)
Vendor
ZOTAC

ZOTAC GeForce GT 710 1GB DDR3 PCIE x 1 , DVI, HDMI, VGA, Low Profile Graphic Card (ZT-71304-20L)

4.2
Regular price
€249,00
Sale price
€249,00
Regular price
€410,00
Sold out
Unit price
per 
Save 39% (€161,00)
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  • Tracked Shipping on All Orders
  • 14 Days Returns

Description

  • NVIDIA GeForce GT 710 GPU. 192 CUDA cores
  • 1 GB DDR3 memory. 64-bit memory bus. Engine clock: 954 MHz. Memory clock: 1600 MHz
  • PCI Express x 1
  • 1 x Dual-link DVI (2560x1600 @ 60 Hz).1 x HDMI (4k @ 30 Hz). 1 x VGA (2048x1536 @ 60 Hz ). Triple display capable
  • Power Requirement: 300-watt power supply. 25-watt max power consumption
  • Package content: ZOTAC GeForce GT 710 PCIE x 1 Zone Edition 1GB . User Manual. Driver disc. 2 x Low profile I/O brackets
  • Extended warranty included with every graphics card purchase. User registration required on ZOTAC website

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  • All customers are entitled to a return window of 14 days, starting from the date of delivery of the product(s).
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Customer Reviews

Great budget upgrade for older integrated video. Not really for games though. I don't really use this card for games, but it's not really meant for gaming anyway. Sure it can play some games on low or basic HW accelerated web games, but that's about it.Now, that's not to say the card doesn't have its advantages. It absolutely does. I was looking to upgrade the integrated video on a 6 year old system that serves primarily media duties. The integrated video could only hardware accelerate x264 video streams, but only up to 720p and absolutely no 60fps video, regardless of SD or HD. Well, this card absolutely cured that. Full x264 (AVC) hardware acceleration, hybrid (CPU+GPU) x265 (HEVC 8-bit only, 10-bit not supported on this card) acceleration, plus MPEG-2, VC-1, WMV3, and VP9 with full HW accelerarion.Now I can play 720p video at 60fps and all of the above codecs at 1080p at 24/30fps with no problem. 1080p/60 was dropping quite a few frames, though. But I overclocked the card's base clock from 954MHz to 1200MHz and it plays it perfectly now. I know that seems like a big increase in speed for a passively cooled card, but the temp barely breaks 50C with 1080p/60 in a 78F room. The card has a temp limit of 80C, so I'm not worried.All in all, it's doing exactly what I need and doing it well. 5Good feel, can be used in a lot of different form factors, and can play modded Minecraft The first thing I'll say about this card is that it feels nice, it doesn't feel like a cheap video adapter. It comes with two individual half-height brackets, one for the DVI & HDMI, one for the VGA, which means you can split them or rearrange if needed. Also, the VGA ribbon cable is detachable, so if you need a single slot, half height card with only 2 ports, that's an option.No fault to Zotac, you can only fit so much cooling in a small space while being passive, but the card does run rather warm. It sat at about 55 C while running 2 1080p monitors, and that's with the stock paste replaced with Noctua NT-H1, but I didn't have a whole lot of airflow in my case. Blasting a fan directly on it dropped it to the 40s. If the thermals mean something to you, I would recommend an active fan version.I bought this card as an experiment: AMD cards perform terribly in OpenGL (Minecraft uses this), so I was wondering how my R9 380X would compare to this. The (quite sad, actually) result was that in vanilla, my the R9 got higher FPS, but in modded, the 710 would beat it at least 2x, up to 6x (not a very scientific test, but that was the out of the box experience), which meant that some packs that were previously unplayable are now playable thanks to this card. 5This card will run 3 monitors simultaneously if each monitor can connect VGA, DVI, or HDMI (one configuration to each monitor) This video card met my requirement to run 3 monitors simultaneously. I do not do gaming, so couldn't comment on that aspect. My Dell Inspiron desktop has only one expansion slot, and that is a PCI Express slot, which is a short slot. Higher end video cards require a lot more connections than will fit into an express slot. What is weird, is that I called Dell tech support to get them to recommend a video card. After getting a recommendation from them, I checked out the card specs and discovered that it is not an express card and would not fit in my motherboard slot. I kept looking and finally found this card on Amazon. I ordered it, put it in my computer, and it has worked wonders ever since. I am happy with it. It was also easy to set up using the information provided with the card. There is one caution: the card has outputs for VGA (15 pin), HDMI, and DVI - one connection each. It will only drive three monitors if your monitors will support at least one of the supplied outputs. Fortunately, I had a monitor that would support DVI, one that would support HDMI, and one that would support VGA. I think there are some adapters on the market that will change some output connections to a different configuration, however that costs more money. I was able to support all 3 of my monitors with the single card with no problems. I mainly run word processing, spreadsheets, email, and low end graphic programs. 5Quiet Server Solution I concern myself with the noise levels of my computers, possibly because I have three in my bedroom that run 24/7. I never shut down my systems except for maintenance, so when I decided to add a video card to my Xeon server, I didn't want to introduce extra noise. I didn't need anything really powerful since it was a server and I would have just lived with the onboard GPU but there are some games nowadays that insist that your graphics card meet certain video requirements just to run a game server. Maybe it's just programmer laziness since servers don't really display game graphics, but as they say "It is what it is". The Zotac GeForce GT710 fit the bill at its low prices and fanless design. I have Zotac in my gaming system also, a 6GB 980Ti AMP Extreme that has three fans, yet they only run when needed so idle noise is very little. Add this to an Intel i7-2600k running a fanless heatsink, a fanless power supply, and no mechanical drives, and even my gaming system is quiet.Sadly, I cannot vouch for how good the GT710 runs games and other graphical applications because I do not need this on a server. If your only intent is browsing the Internet or playing some older games that do not need State-of-the-Art graphics, this card should work fine. If you want to play the latest Battlefield, Call of Duty, War Thunder, etc., look at another card. 5GT 710 perfect for adding additional monitors. Low power, low heat low costI needed this to run additional displays. I run 3 Monitors off my main GTX 760 and 2 more off this Zotac GT 710.Mashed potatoes n Gravy, could not be happier with the results. It plays 1080P videos on my Plasma at 40C temp and only uses 167Mb of ram of the 1 gig. really don't need the 2 Gig for display use. 1 GB is over kill.In terms of heat produced, and performance for the task at hand the thing hits hard, I mean it just works and keeps on working.Simple set up even a small child or older adult can do it. The thing practically installs itself.No fan is needed, no extra power connector is needed. Uses the same Nvidia drivers as my main card.For most activities its GPU is at 135Hz and memory is at 400hz (throttled down as not needed) And this is running full 1080P videos.Perfect card to add additional displays to your system.I'm gaming on one monitor and this little card is pumping out FULL 1080P video to my 65 inch TV all at the same time without even breaking a sweat. For the price I'm not sure how you could ask for anything more. 5This fills a niche. But avoid if you can. This card, for what it is, is a godsend. If you really cannot avoid fitting a graphics card into a x1 slot, this is the one.That said, I had a few issues with it. On the computer I actually bought it to use with, it was problematic in either of the two x1 slots on the board. It worked ok in one of the longer slots, but being only x1 was noticeably slower than an otherwise identical card running at x4. I wasn't running games, just VMWare Workstation with full screen VMs on a secondary monitor.The takeaway is that even low end GPUs can benefit from a few more PCIe lanes. This card is the right choice if you really only have an x1 slot, but if you have a few more lanes to spare (I can think of at least one Geforce 710 card with an x8 connector) you'll be better off, even for general desktop use. x4 seems to be the sweet spot for GPUs of this caliber. 4If you really need a pcie 1 card (update) It's not for everyone and there are better cards out there but it worked for what I needed. I had an ESC motherboard with j1800 embedded CPU and wanted to try a video card for a dirt cheap built. The board only has a pcie1 slot so I couldn't buy a common graphics card and this was the only option. I read alot of bad reviews about cheap card being a waste of money and didn't but I took a Risk. Well it worked , got a 30% performance increase on bench mark score. I played a few steam games on it and average 35fps on medium settings.Tested Skyrim and it plays 32 fps very playable. Tested call of duty 4 and it plays 55 fps very playable. Tested oblivion and got 36 fps very playable. Tested resident evil 4 and got 30 fps very playable.My built is:ESC bat-1 motherboard embedded intel J1800 duel core 2.8..($45)Memory ram crucial 8gb running 1333 speed..($35)120 GB solid state drive from Sand disk.. ($45)Zotac GeForce gt 710 1gb graphics card.. ($45)300 watt ATX power supply Dell refurbish.. ($20)Windows 10 pro 64bit not activated.. (free)Silverstone SG13B mini itx case.. ($35)Update 2019: got another one but this time it did want to work with Windows 10. I used it in Ubuntu and it works fine. Not sure what changed but no longer worked in my windows pc. Might by my mother board bios or newer windows update made it non compatibleUpdate: tried different motherboards different drivers different windows OS and nothing wont work with Windows. Maybe it s defective 5Set your expectations properly and you'll be pleased The last time my dad came out to visit, he brought a massive ATX tower desktop. Knowing his requirements (and looking inside at how empty the case was), it was clear that this was way too much case and way too little PC. We went and picked up a salvaged Dell Optiplex 755 small form factor PC, then I cleaned it up and added more RAM and a hybrid hard drive. There was one problem left: the Core 2 Duo's internal graphics were hilariously awful, struggling to push 1080p playback at all. It was obvious that he needed a graphics card, just about any graphics card, to make it usable.The case is slim, only about 4" side to side, and there's no PCIe riser, so I was limited to half-width cards. he didn't need much, nor did he want to spend much, so this card was the lucky winner.This was my first adventure into Zotac graphics cards. I've heard mixed reviews on their higher end stuff, but this was a good opportunity to step in and see how their lowest end stuff performs. I *do* want to feel them out before deciding on a GTX 1070 model for myself, after all. The GT 710 was more than enough for my dad's needs, the low-profile form factor was great, and the passive cooling made it completely silent.1080p playback was flawless. YouTube looked and sounded great with no stutter or distortion, and local media files played just fine. The card runs a bit hot, but that's to be expected from a passively cooled GPU in a compact case....that didn't stop me from trying to overclock it, though. Because I was already pushing the limits of what this cheap OEM power supply could handle, not to mention the thermal limits of the card, I didn't go too crazy. I did get a nice little +60MHz core, +200MHz memory bump. Because I was perfectly stable there and hit only my thermal limits, the card probably has some more headroom for a better overclock in a bigger case with more ventilation.That said, under no circumstances would I consider a GT 710, let alone one powered by DDR3, if I were shopping for a gaming rig. The card just isn't designed for that, and even low settings at 720p will offer choppy framerates and bad graphics quality. To put it into perspective, I still have a GTX 260 from my old PC lying around. That GTX 260 can run rings around the GT 710. The 260 is from 2009. The GT 710 is from 2015. Consider that if you're thinking about using this card for gaming, no matter how light.That said, no one really markets the 710 as a gaming card. It's marketed for what it is: a card to add HDMI support to a PC that doesn't have a built-in HDMI port, or for old computers that need a cheap replacement for outdated untenable graphics that can't keep up. If you keep that in mind, temper your expectations and understand that you're just not going to get a brand new, high end gaming card (or any worthwhile gaming card, for that matter) for $40, you'll be very happy with this purchase. 5Perfect graphics upgrade for integrated APU Upgraded my Ivy Bridge Celeron G APU graphics with this card. I don't play games so that wasn't a consideration, but I watch a lot of video and noticed a lot of frame drops with 1080p material using integrated graphics. This particular PC runs Ubuntu 14.04, displaying on a recent-ish Samsung LCD TV via HDMI.This Zotac card fits in a single PCIe x16 slot, even with the passive heatsink. The install process was simple and less hassle than I thought, since my BIOS defaults to using any PCIe card as the primary display. Had to download & install the proprietary nVidia GPU drivers but this literally required 2 clicks after opening the Additional Drivers program.I use the opening few minutes of my Quadrophenia BD as a graphics test because playing the beachscape in VLC used to look likepaint melting off a wall. It looks fine now.Graphics aren't perfect as I see tearing and some judder in VLC, but none of that is apparent playing the same content in Kodi. I saw afew frame drops with the Two Towers 1080p but these were minuscule compared to frame drops under integrated video.Bonus surprise: the nVidia drivers added a bunch of new GPU data to my pSensors screen, I didn't even have to do anything, they justshowed up. So I'm able to track GPU temp, activity, bus use, etc..Despite being installed right next to another card, GPU temp always falls after I stop video and it never gets too hot even during a 90 min 1080p movie. So the passive cooling is sufficient for my use.One glitch: using the nVidia driver's default settings, dark scenes were almost unwatchable. The screen went mostly blank as black rendering was way off between this card and my LCD display. Fixed this by limiting RGB color range in the nvidia-settings program, now dark scenes look fine. 5works great if you don't have a full sized 16X PCIe slot available. I was trying to set up an old PC with UBUNTU Linux to use as a home theater PC. The PC didn't have room for a bigger graphics card requiring a full sized PCIe slot. While this graphics card will not satisfy a PC gamer wanting a really fast GPU, it is working great for me for 1080i HD videos. The old PC I was trying to use had an integrated VGA port on the motherboard, but it was too slow for watching HD video. I don't know if it would be enough GPU horsepower for Ultra-4K video, but it is great for 1080i.It has a good sized heatsink without a fan, and it only requires 1 slot width of space. I would not suggest putting it next to another adapter card where air couldn't flow easily over the heatsink. I had already put a quiet case fan to exhaust heat from the CPU and its fan, and everything is staying cool without having noisy fan(s) on the graphics card. In addition to wanting the system to be quiet when watching TV or listening to music using the system, it is in my bedroom where I wanted it quiet when not in use.Other reviewers said they have difficulty using the card with Windows, but I'm using it with UBUNTU without any problems. It runs fine with the open source drivers as well as with NVIDIA's latest drivers for UBUNTU 18.04. For people that cannot get it to work as a replacement for their systems' motherboard built-in graphics, it may help to disable the onboard graphics in CMOS setup or via jumper setting on their motherboard. The onboard graphics are often AMD-ATI-Radeon or Intel. The Windows drivers for this card using an NVIDIA GPU, sometimes don't work well when trying to have multiple display adapters active that are not the same brand.The speed versus cost of this card compared to others isn't really great, because you're paying a slight premium for a specialty card, since this is the only one I found online that works in a tiny 1X PCIe slot. 5
ZOTAC GeForce GT 710 1GB DDR3 PCIE x 1 , DVI, HDMI, VGA, Low Profile Graphic Card (ZT-71304-20L)

ZOTAC GeForce GT 710 1GB DDR3 PCIE x 1 , DVI, HDMI, VGA, Low Profile Graphic Card (ZT-71304-20L)

4.2
Error You can't add more than 500 quantity.
Regular price
€249,00
Sale price
€249,00
Regular price
€410,00
Sold out
Unit price
per 
Save 39% (€161,00)