- IT Support
What Happens When Your IT Support Provider Goes Bust?
20 Feb, 2026

£399.90 inc. VAT
AI-generated summary
At £332.87 ex-VAT, this HP-branded RX 6300 2GB feels like a hard sell unless you’ve got a very specific reason to buy *exactly* this card. The big issue isn’t the “Radeon” part—it’s the 2GB frame buffer. In day-to-day business visuals, that can be fine, but for anything beyond basic display work (heavier browser workloads, multiple monitors with GPU-accelerated content, light design, or virtualization/remote sessions with dynamic rendering) you’ll run into texture limits and stuttering long before you feel you’ve “got value”.
I’d only consider it for small, cost-conscious deployments where you mainly need extra display outputs and basic acceleration, and you’re not expecting it to behave like a modern gaming or workstation GPU. If you’re buying for CAD, creative apps, ML workflows, or even just “keep it for a few years,” I’d push you toward a card with a bigger memory pool—because in 2026, 2GB is the bottleneck far more often than the compute. Even in a reseller context, I’d rather help you spend a bit more once than replace sooner. If you tell me what the clients are actually doing (apps + number of displays), I can say whether this is a “works fine” purchase or a budget trap.

Asus
ASUS - Noctua OC Edition - graphics card - GeForce RTX 5080 - 16 GB GDDR7 - PCI Express 5.0 - 3 x DisplayPort, 2 x HDMI

Asus
ASUS GT730-SL-2GD5-BRK - Graphics card - GF GT 730 - 2 GB GDDR5 - PCIe 2.0 low profile - DVI, D-Sub, HDMI - fanless

Dell
NVIDIA RTX A1000 - Graphics card - RTX A1000 - 8 GB GDDR6 - PCIe 4.0 x8 - 4 x Mini DisplayPort

Lenovo
NVIDIA RTX 5000 ADA - Graphics card - RTX 5000 Ada - 32 GB GDDR6 - PCIe 4.0 x16 - 4 x DisplayPort