Jun 4, 2011 10:56 GMT  ·  By

It would appear that a certain mobile graphics card that was released recently ended up inside some of the laptops that Eurocom has available, all of them aimed at the high-end market segment.

Intel, NVIDIA and Advanced Micro Devices always seem to start a whole string of product releases whenever they release some new central processing unit, chipset of graphics solution.

As such, it wasn't such a strange thing to see new systems sprout up after NVIDIA delivered the GeForce GTX 560M mobile graphics card.

Also, it was not odd to see existing notebook get updated with the option of being equipped with this solution instead of the AMD Radeon HD 6970M or NVIDIA's own GeForce GTX 485M, among others.

Turns out that Eurocom has three different notebooks that went through this very sort of update procedure.

Named Racer, Neptune and Panther 3.0, they have display sizes of 15.6 inches and 17.3 inches (for the latter two).

For those that want a reminder, the new discrete video card can be equipped with either 1.5 GB or 3 GB of GDDR5 VRAM.

Also, 192 CUDA cores are present, along with a memory interface of up to 192 bits, enabling a more than decent bandwidth.

As for clock speeds, the GPU works at 775 MHz, while the shaders and memory operate at 1,550 MHz and 5,000 MHz, respectively.

The base choice is for a single board, but Eurocom also allows those with stronger financial backing to select multi-GPU (SLI) configurations.

As for the rest of the devices' feature sets, Full HD displays (1,920 x 1,080 pixels resolution) are put to work by a configuration centered around second-generation Intel Core CPUs or an Intel Xeon processor, each backed by up to 32 GB of RAM (random access memory) and complemented by matching storage and connectivity capabilities.