ASUS are world renowned for there elite tier GPU offerings and in this respect are one of my favourites for a long time. Each generation I publish a review on these forums looking at the Matrix series in great detail and how well its looking and performing against similar GPU from others vendors.
When they asked me to look at a R9 390X 8gb Strix card I was interested to see how ASUS had implemented its new features into a mid-high end offering.
After taking the card out of the box I noticed the weight of the card. This is a very hefty and well built offering. It has a full back plate to stop any BGA issues, flexing of the PCB over time and assist in cooling. It has the new DC3 cooler with heat pipes in direct contact with the die which shifts heat away from the GPU much quicker, these heat pipes are thicker than on the older style DC2 cooler and are designed to dissipate more watts of heat. This new DC3 cooler has a three fan design which should help to maintain cool operation while running the fans at lower speed so creating less noise.
The looks of the entire card are those of a premium product and on initial inspection reminds me a lot of Matrix this in itself is a massive complement with the Matrix being one of the best looking cards available. The colour scheme is typical ASUS black and red in fitting with all there ROG and Pro gaming series motherboards. The card is two slot so can be run in multi card config with no issues at all.
Below we have pics of the card in my X99 testing Rig.



Now lets show some overclocking and performance figures.
Test System:
ASUS R9 390X Strix 8gb
Intel 5960x 4875mhz
ASUS Rampage 5 Xtreme
Kingston Predator DDR4
Superflower 8Pack 2000w PSU
Windows 64 Bit 8.1 with AMD 15.7 Drivers
Valley 1080p (Maxed out)

Heaven 1080p (Maxed out)

Firestrike

Firestrike Xtreme

Valley 4k (Maxed out)

Heaven 4k (Maxed out)

As we can see from the results the Overclocking on the R390X Strix on its stock cooler is very strong. 1200mhz Core and 1750mhz mems was very very rare on any 290X on air cooling with half the memory available here. This sample could run stable even at 4k resolutions with such high OC's again a real plus point and offering a good boost in performance.
The cooler is designed to run quiet with the fans at complete idle at no load and only needing to spin up to 48% output to keep the card under 75C while running at full overclocked frequency's. This meant the card was almost completely silent in operation even on a test bench so in a system I am sure almost totally inaudible. I further tested the cooler by forcing the fans to full just to see how low it could keep the card if purely temps and benching is your goal and the card never exceeded 62C. Which is a very low temp for air cooling on any R9 GPU and around 1 C better than my previous testing with solutions by Sapphire and MSI.
In conclusion I would recommend the ASUS R9 390X Strix to anyone in the market for a mid to high end AMD GPU. The card Overclocks well which boost performance, is very well built, looks great and runs cool and quiet.
When they asked me to look at a R9 390X 8gb Strix card I was interested to see how ASUS had implemented its new features into a mid-high end offering.
After taking the card out of the box I noticed the weight of the card. This is a very hefty and well built offering. It has a full back plate to stop any BGA issues, flexing of the PCB over time and assist in cooling. It has the new DC3 cooler with heat pipes in direct contact with the die which shifts heat away from the GPU much quicker, these heat pipes are thicker than on the older style DC2 cooler and are designed to dissipate more watts of heat. This new DC3 cooler has a three fan design which should help to maintain cool operation while running the fans at lower speed so creating less noise.
The looks of the entire card are those of a premium product and on initial inspection reminds me a lot of Matrix this in itself is a massive complement with the Matrix being one of the best looking cards available. The colour scheme is typical ASUS black and red in fitting with all there ROG and Pro gaming series motherboards. The card is two slot so can be run in multi card config with no issues at all.
Below we have pics of the card in my X99 testing Rig.



Now lets show some overclocking and performance figures.
Test System:
ASUS R9 390X Strix 8gb
Intel 5960x 4875mhz
ASUS Rampage 5 Xtreme
Kingston Predator DDR4
Superflower 8Pack 2000w PSU
Windows 64 Bit 8.1 with AMD 15.7 Drivers
Valley 1080p (Maxed out)

Heaven 1080p (Maxed out)

Firestrike

Firestrike Xtreme

Valley 4k (Maxed out)

Heaven 4k (Maxed out)

As we can see from the results the Overclocking on the R390X Strix on its stock cooler is very strong. 1200mhz Core and 1750mhz mems was very very rare on any 290X on air cooling with half the memory available here. This sample could run stable even at 4k resolutions with such high OC's again a real plus point and offering a good boost in performance.
The cooler is designed to run quiet with the fans at complete idle at no load and only needing to spin up to 48% output to keep the card under 75C while running at full overclocked frequency's. This meant the card was almost completely silent in operation even on a test bench so in a system I am sure almost totally inaudible. I further tested the cooler by forcing the fans to full just to see how low it could keep the card if purely temps and benching is your goal and the card never exceeded 62C. Which is a very low temp for air cooling on any R9 GPU and around 1 C better than my previous testing with solutions by Sapphire and MSI.
In conclusion I would recommend the ASUS R9 390X Strix to anyone in the market for a mid to high end AMD GPU. The card Overclocks well which boost performance, is very well built, looks great and runs cool and quiet.

