I think it's gonna be launch stock or nothing if you want it before xmas![]()
I reckon you could be right. Expect it to be around 600 nickers though.
Please remember that any mention of competitors, hinting at competitors or offering to provide details of competitors will result in an account suspension. The full rules can be found under the 'Terms and Rules' link in the bottom right corner of your screen. Just don't mention competitors in any way, shape or form and you'll be OK.
I think it's gonna be launch stock or nothing if you want it before xmas![]()
SNIP![]()
There's rumours that this hardware is basically the same as the 5870 but has been deliberately been downclocked to meet power requirement regulations for the card, apparantly a single PCIE device should not exceed 300W during normal operation which is basically what the card is running at stock.
But users overclocking past that and causing a bigger power draw is their own choice
Thats probably why of all the 3 clocks (core/mem/shader) the shader is the only one that hasn't been decreased relative to the 5870, because the ATI drivers dont allow overclocking of that.
If the 300W limit is to be taken seriously does that mean that video cards are reaching a problem soon? No doubt Nvidia will have their own dual GPU counterpart I bet they run into the same problem.
As always you have made the mistake a lot of people do with these comparisons and have forgotten about VAT...........
Before the price increases both 5850 and 5870 worked out exactly at $/£ conversion plus VAT and bout a £10 premium which is about right for launch price/actually having stock etc.
As of today's exchange rate they should be about £415 to £420. Put a premium on for early release and maybe £450.
If they do, then compared to two 5870's they will be a bargain.
I think it's gonna be launch stock or nothing if you want it before xmas
As always you have made the mistake a lot of people do with these comparisons and have forgotten about VAT...........
I don't think it's a hard limit of 300W as such but I believe this is a 'safe' limit for the 6+8 pin PCI-E power connector configuration before instability could be caused by a lack of power.
Using the in-built ATI Overdrive overclocking tool, we managed 800MHz at the core and 4400MHz DDR at the memory, which gave us a negligible improvement of 120 3DMarks. Further attempts to replicate the higher clock speeds of the Radeon HD 5870 failed, as Vantage would crash halfway into the benchmarking run. Apparently, the Radeon HD 5970 is not a very keen overclocker despite what ATI /AMD would like to have us believe. Perhaps it could be somewhat linked to the early driver nature and this may yet see an area of improvement in the near future.
Bah, from that review the overclocks dont look great...
Looks like ran low on power before they could hit the 5870 speeds, lame :/
Well volt modding is beyond most users willingness to overclock, the cable config is only supplying 300W and the card is basically pulling that at stock so for the people overclocking simply for performance benefit and not as a hobby I dont think we'll see 5870 speeds.
Digital VRMs means its will be as easy as moving a slider to up the core voltage. The power supplied via PCI-E 6 and 8 pin is a rating limit, it doesn't physically limit the actual power available. In fact a cable will continue to supply power until it overheats and melts or the psu gives out and/or hits a current limiter.Well volt modding is beyond most users willingness to overclock, the cable config is only supplying 300W and the card is basically pulling that at stock so for the people overclocking simply for performance benefit and not as a hobby I dont think we'll see 5870 speeds.
Probaly not just yet, but it will.Volt modding is in software though isn't it? Perhaps the utils don't work for it yet.
AFIK a 6-pin pci-e can supply up to 75W, an 8 pin one 150W and the pci-e 2 board should do 225W as well giving a total of 450W for the card. I assume the card is limited to 300W so it is backwards compatible and work in pci-e 1 boards which can only give 75W through the slot giving a max of 300W.
The power spec has also been increased. A new version of the power supply connector that is used for graphics cards that need more power than the slot can deliver (sometimes called a PEG connector, for PCI-Express Graphics) has been introduced, changing from 6 pins to 8. A single x16 card may now draw up to 300 W of power (75 W from the slot itself, 150 W from an 8-pin PEG connector, 75 W from a second PEG connector), up from 225 W (75 W from the slot, 75 W each from 2 6-pin PEG connectors) or originally 150 W (75 W from the slot, 75 W from a 6-pin PEG connector).
I would buy it if i had a case to fit it.
Anyone else sick of UK prices, we have a USD to GBP exchange rate of $1 to £0.6 but actual RRP of products comes in at about $1 to £0.8![]()
The 5970 should come with a free case really shouldnt it![]()