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Guru3D.com » Review » Club3D Radeon HD 7790 Crossfire review » Page 1

Club3D Radeon HD 7790 Crossfire review

Posted by Hilbert Hagedoorn on: 03/22/2013 02:24 PM [ 9 comment(s) ]

Introduction
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AMD Radeon HD 7790 Crossfire with the Club3D 13 Series

We test and review the Club3D Radeon HD 7790 both Single and in 2-way Crossfire. The new graphics card is intended to boost a little more performance into entry-level gaming. Admittedly, AMD has done a very nice job with this card and for not a lot of money you can certainly play most of today's games really well at fairly high resolutions. Have peek at our review where we'll test the 13 Series from Club3D.

So if you draw up a pie chart then you'd be surprised that the biggest chunk of the market for graphics cards is entry level. Obviously that makes a lot of sense as OEMs love to include the cheapest card available in a PC. But considering the price level, many people that do not have or want to spend heaps of cash to play a game, pick up one of these cards. I mean think back a year or three, I really liked the Radeon HD 5770 at the time. You know what? Here is a little history lesson on AMD's lineup over the years. 

Iit was October 2009 when ATI released the Juniper GPU, you know the product as the Radeon HD 5770. It has been one of the best selling graphics cards for ATI-AMD evah, for the very simple reason that for not a lot of money you received a product with 800 shader processors. So for a price just above entry level that made a thing or two possible, gaming at 1600x1200 became a viable reality and next to that a grand feature set was introduced (Eyefinity etc). Later on the 5770 got refreshed as the 6770, which mostly was the same product. Last year, in February 2012 AMD released a product developed under the GPU codename 'Cape Verde', the graphics cards derived from that GPU were the Radeon HD 7750 and 7770 One GHz edition. That was not a refresh, it was a completely new GPU based on their GCN architecture.

Interesting was that with less shader processors AMD was able to make these products faster. They benefitted from the GCN architecture but also had a trump card at hand, as this was the first ever reference card that was clocked at 1 GHz - hence AMD gave all these cards a 'GHz Edition' extension. The 28nm node allows them to place a good 1.5 billion transistors onto the GPU's 123 mm2 die, and that made the card a good 25% faster.

AMD has been focusing on three primary features and key selling points ever since the series 5000 products were released. The new graphics adapters are of course DirectX 11 ready. With Windows 7/8 and Vista being DX11 ready, games immediately took advantage of DirectCompute, multi-threading, Hardware Tessellation and new shader extensions.

Back to the year 2013 though - it's fairly similar to the tick-tock release model from Intel, but yes, we arrive at the tock from AMD, the radeon 7790 is introduced today. The Radeon HD 7790 is still based on a 28nm fabrication process, the GPU empowering these new cards will however be the new Bonaire based GPU based on GCN (Graphics Core Next) architecture. Despite the earlier rumors of 768 shader processors, the GPU actually has 896 stream processors. With 1 GB of GDDR5 graphics memory running over a 128-bit GDDR5 memory bus the card will bring the overall game performance close to the Radeon HD 7850 and beyond the competing GeForce GTX 650 Ti. The card will get a 85 Watt TDP rating and, depending on the model released of course, a reference clock frequency of 1000 MHz whilst boosting the memory clock up to 6.0 GHz (effective data-rate / GDDR5 / 128-bit).

So what's the 13 Series Club3D graphics cards all about ?

Well, it's all about delivering the product as cheap as possible toward you. Selected products will be offered without any bundle in a simple white box, intended for those who need nothing more than the graphics card only. Club 3D will keep focusing on their Black label ‘PokerSeries’ cards by adding exciting new products and bundles in 2013. The White label 13 Series will be supported by an aggressive price tag only. So the kick off in the new white label 13 series is the HD7790 offering value for money.

We test the Club3D Radeon HD 7790 13 Series which is just the card, nothing else. The product has a simplified single fan solution, dual-DVI, HDMI and display port. This particular model comes factory clocked at 1033 MHz clock frequency with 6.0 GHz on the memory. But head on over to the next page where we'll meet and greet Bonaire, aka Radeon HD 7790 and talk about the reference specifications for a bit.

Onwards into the review, next page please. 
 





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Guru3D.com » Articles » Club3D Radeon HD 7790 Crossfire review » Page 1

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