HIS Radeon HD 7750 iCooler review

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Specs and Southern Islands

 

Southern Islands

You've been hearing about several codenames and that can be a little confusing. It's simple really, in the market we have entry level, mainstream and high-end products. When you notice 'Cape Verde' that's the entry level Radeon HD 7700 series of graphics cards. 'Pitcairn' will be the codename the mainstream products will hide (R7800) under, and finally 'Tahiti' is the codename for the most high-end products.

  • Entry level = Cape Verde = Radeon HD 7700 series
  • Mainstream level = Pitcairn = Radeon HD 7800 series
  • High-end level = Tahiti = Radeon HD 7900 series

The entire segment from top to bottom will be released in Q1 2012. The 7900 series has been launched, now it's time for entry-level, the Radeon HD 7700 series.

Technology

It is important to understand that there are significant changes in this family of GPUs. The GPU architecture was overhauled, AMD moved towards a 28nm process technology, the new cards are all PCIe gen 3 compatible and there have been significant changes on power consumption. We'll address all the features separately of course.

With the launch of the Radeon HD 7000 series Eyefinity has been updated to version 2.0. DDM audio is now fully supported (you hear audio on the actual monitor it's played on), a new 5x1 landscape mode is introduced, and you may now create custom multi-monitor resolutions.

Radeon HD series 7700

We start off with the GPU overview (architecture we'll discuss later). AMD now bakes GPUs on the all new 28nm node, in very simple wording that means they can put more transistors on a smaller area.

The Cape Verde core has a good 1.5 Billion transistors, the internal architecture has changed, we'll talk a little deeper about that in a minute. But as a result:

  • The Radeon HD 7750 is packed with 512 shader processors harbored in Compute Unit segments (8 of them).
  • The Radeon HD 7770 is packed with 640 shader processors harbored in Compute Unit segments (10 of them).

Radeon HD 7750 and 7770

Memory wise both cards will pack 1 gigabyte of DDR5 memory, quite a bit for entry level products. The memory bus is 128-bit, but combined with the gDDR5 memory (which is quad data rate) you do get a decent chunk of much needed memory bandwidth, which the GPU certainly can use. The memory clock will be 1125 MHz, being quad data-rate (gDDR5) that results in an effective data rate of 4500 MHz or 4.5 GHz. This will give the Cape Verde GPUs 72 GB/sec of framebuffer bandwidth to do its thing in.

Radeon HD 7750 and 7770

The Cape Verde GPU packs 1.5 billion transistors, but if you can't apply a fast enough clock frequency it would become a problem. Well, that's not an issue for AMD either, the R7750 is clocked at 800 MHz while the Radeon HD 7770 will get a reference core clock frequency at a full GHz.

Radeon HD 7750 and 7770

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