I'd check the specs on those cards before buying. I believe all the 1650 Super cards will require external power.
I'm upgrading a Lenovo V520 business desktop for a colleague and that only has a 180W PSU with no PCIe power connectors. The case also has very limited space for a graphics card.
I've ordered a Zotac GeForce GTX 1650 GDDR6, which was the fastest card I could find that was under 75W, and would actually fit into the PC. It's just under 6 inches long, reference height, and dual slot. A friend has been using the GDDR5 version of the card for over a year now and it's been really good considering the size, and power consumption.
Here's a short video of the Zotac GTX 1650 GDDR5 that I posted when the card arrived. It shows the exact measurements (which are the same as the GDDR6 version).
The GeForce GTX 1650 Super cards are worth the extra $20 or so over the GTX1650 if you have the extra power (around 100W) and 6.25 inches of space.
If you can fit a 7 inch card, and you have 125W available for it (8 pin PCIe required), and can find stretch to $230 then the Zotac GTX 1660 Super Twin Fan is a big step up. It's over 50% faster (than a vanilla 1650) in most games and has an extra 2GB of memory. That's the card I would probably try to get.
<p>The all-new generation of ZOTAC GAMING GeForce GTX SUPER graphics cards are here. Based on the new NVIDIA Turing architecture, get ready to get fast and game strong.</p> <p>- Super Compact Design<br />- Dual Offset Fan Design<br />- 4K / HDR / VR Ready<br />- FireStorm Utility (Download...
www.zotac.com
This review at Techspot has several benchmarks for all 3 of the cards I've mentioned, although the 1650 they show will be a GDDR5 one, and the GDDR6 versions are around 5% faster.
Today we're bringing you a day-one review of the new GeForce GTX 1650 Super and it seems we're doing so against Nvidia's wishes. In a puzzling decision,...
www.techspot.com