Monday, October 26th 2009

Sapphire HD 5750 Vapor-X 1 GB Pictured

Sapphire's newest mid-range offering is also one of the first non-reference designs of the ATI Radeon HD 5700 series. The company brings the popular Vapor-X cooling technology to the mid-range Radeon HD 5750, along with 1 GB of GDDR5 memory. From the limited visuals of the PCB, we can make that Sapphire has come up with entirely its own PCB design, which is slightly shorter than the AMD reference Radeon HD 5700 board. The center of attraction, the cooler, consists of a sporty cooler shroud, under which, is a Vapor-X GPU cooler. A GPU contact block with a Vapor chamber acts as a large heatpipe, uniformly conveying heat to the heatsink above it, which is cooled by a fan. The connectivity cluster is standard: two DVI-D, and one each of DisplayPort, and HDMI (with 7.1 channel audio). Under the hood, the Radeon HD 5750 packs 720 stream processors, and a 128-bit wide GDDR5 memory interface. Sapphire gave its Vapor-X accelerator slightly overclocked settings: core running at 710 MHz (core, reference: 700 MHz), 1160 MHz (memory, reference 1150 MHz). Slated for early November, the Sapphire HD 5750 Vapor-X 1 GB will be priced slightly higher than the reference-design accelerators already available.
Source: HardwareCanucks
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37 Comments on Sapphire HD 5750 Vapor-X 1 GB Pictured

#26
Fx
FreedomEclipsedo want!!!
me too! I jumped to early to snag a XFX 5870 as soon as they came out :ohwell:
Posted on Reply
#27
FreedomEclipse
~Technological Technocrat~
At least I got 2 4870's I could pawn off to pay for one... I think thats a better idea then running 2 cards.
Posted on Reply
#28
Fx
FreedomEclipseAt least I got 2 4870's I could pawn off to pay for one... I think thats a better idea then running 2 cards.
I think so too- I have never been a big fan of xfire/sli

the scaling has vastly improved over the last couple years but still. I have always been able to get a satisfactory gaming experience from 1 powerful card with less heat, noise and cost
Posted on Reply
#29
FreedomEclipse
~Technological Technocrat~
I dunno anyway, the card looks good but then again. I havent really come across a game that my setup has struggled in to warrant an upgrade. my 4870's are less then a year old & 1 came back from a long winded nasty RMA which involved 2-4weeks of waiting & quite a few frustraiting phonecalls 6 months ago.

If CoD:Mw2 starts to choke my pc to death then I may consider this 5870, if not I'l probably wait until Q2/Q3 of 2010 to upgrade.

my setup still pumps out some real nice frames. the only thing I really got planned is getting a few more Spinpoint F1's, a Xonar D2x & possibly a compact watercooling kit -though thats still an optional requirement as my Vendetta2 is doing a great job keeping temps low.

other then that Im very satified with what I got - its no i7 but its no junk either,
Posted on Reply
#30
DonInKansas
Freedom--You'd probably see some uber power savings going from CF 4870 to a 5870 though. Not to mention a cooler case. :)
Posted on Reply
#31
Fx
FreedomEclipseI dunno anyway, the card looks good but then again. I havent really come across a game that my setup has struggled in to warrant an upgrade. my 4870's are less then a year old & 1 came back from a long winded nasty RMA which involved 2-4weeks of waiting & quite a few frustraiting phonecalls 6 months ago.

If CoD:Mw2 starts to choke my pc to death then I may consider this 5870, if not I'l probably wait until Q2/Q3 of 2010 to upgrade.

my setup still pumps out some real nice frames. the only thing I really got planned is getting a few more Spinpoint F1's, a Xonar D2x & possibly a compact watercooling kit -though thats still an optional requirement as my Vendetta2 is doing a great job keeping temps low.

other then that Im very satified with what I got - its no i7 but its no junk either,
meh, you dont need an i7 for gaming anyways. if I were you I would stick with the two 4870s and just work on those other upgrades that you are lusting after
Posted on Reply
#32
FreedomEclipse
~Technological Technocrat~
DonInKansasFreedom--You'd probably see some uber power savings going from CF 4870 to a 5870 though. Not to mention a cooler case. :)
I got a Antec 902 case - My 4870's have custom coolers & with a minor bios tweak never go over 55'c (unless im right in the middle of a heatwave) & their still pretty silent too :P so i think Ive got the cooling part pretty coverd.
Posted on Reply
#33
Roph
I'll wait for a 57xx that doesn't require an external connector; from the spec sheets is seems very possible to make one :)
Posted on Reply
#34
urban_black_redneck
RophI'll wait for a 57xx that doesn't require an external connector; from the spec sheets is seems very possible to make one :)
Have fun waiting for that....
Posted on Reply
#35
eidairaman1
The Exiled Airman
R_1I was under the impression that reference HD5770 card has already vapor-chamber cooler. So what's the big deal wit this Sapphire HD 5750 Vapor-X.
Different Cooler which will enable you to overclock further, remain quieter operating.
Posted on Reply
#36
eidairaman1
The Exiled Airman
I say the card is a nice part, Now I just wonder how the 5770 is going to be like.
Posted on Reply
#37
vagxtr
tkpenaltyNo........................... learn how something works...the chamber is the plate that contacts the core, and works like a heatpipe.
Maybe he thought that plastic should function as some cooling liquid tank and when it's evaporated you just tank some more and run as fast as you can :D
Posted on Reply
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