Thursday, January 19th 2012

ASUS Radeon HD 7970 DirectCu II Graphics Card Pictured

Here are the first pictures of ASUS' premium DirectCu II graphics card designed around AMD's Radeon HD 7970 GPU. The design is based on giving the GPU a powerful cooling solution, backed by a custom-design PCB. Since its cooling solution spans across three expansion slots, one of the three expansion slot brackets is productively used to provide additional display connectivity. To begin with, the PCB uses a 10+1+1 ASUS Digi+ VRM that draws power from two 8-pin PCIe power connectors. It supports heavy overclocking, and provides several voltage tuning features.

A common metal heatsink spans along the length of the card, making contact with VRM and memory components. On top of this sits the DirectCu II heatsink. This heatsink uses a large aluminum fin-stack heatsink to which heat from the GPU is conveyed by six heat-pipes, which make direct contact with it. The heatsink itself isn't very thick, but what makes the card span across three slots are its two 100 mm fans. The GPU is clocked out of the box at 1000 MHz (vs. 925 MHz reference), and 5.60 GHz/1400 MHz actual memory (vs. 5.50 GHz/1375 MHz actual reference).
This card also features what is called "VGA Hotwire", which is a 2-pin cable, one end of which needs to be soldered onto the graphics card, the other is plugged into a special header on ROG Rampage IV series motherboards. This allows advanced users to eliminate the need for variable resistors and use the motherboard's voltage controller to tune come key voltage domains of the graphics card as if it were the motherboard's.

Display outputs include two dual-link DVI and four full-size DisplayPort 1.2 connectors. The card is 11 inches (27.94 cm) long, and we mentioned earlier spans across three expansion slots in your case. ASUS' previous-generation DirectCu II cards based on GeForce GTX 580/570 and Radeon HD 6970/6950 were just as big. Pricing information is not available.
Add your own comment

31 Comments on ASUS Radeon HD 7970 DirectCu II Graphics Card Pictured

#1
imitation
I can still remember back when the fastest graphics cards were small single-slot boards. What have we come to?
Posted on Reply
#2
btarunr
Editor & Senior Moderator
imitationI can still remember back when the fastest graphics cards were small single-slot boards. What have we come to?
This.
Posted on Reply
#3
Disparia
Cool. I always like the clean backplate of the DirectCu cards. Couple DVI's and four DP all nicely arranged. And none that DL+SL shiz, double DL!
Posted on Reply
#4
mab1376
I'm curious to see how these stack up against the new GTX680 cards.
Posted on Reply
#5
ensabrenoir
mab1376I'm curious to see how these stack up against the new GTX680 cards.
Im just curious to see the 680s
Posted on Reply
#6
badtaylorx
wow!!! that's impressive....it's nice to see that the issues with the 6970 dcuII have been addressed... that one piece vrm/mem/card stabilizer is sweet...

way to go asus
Posted on Reply
#7
arnoo1
they should go back to 2 slots, 3 slots is stupid:banghead:
Posted on Reply
#8
alexsubri
Card sexy ...price is going to be a turn off :(
Posted on Reply
#9
badtaylorx
arnoo1they should go back to 2 slots, 3 slots is stupid:banghead:
no way......i love the tri-slots i have 2 hd6970s and they look AWESOME :rockout:
Posted on Reply
#10
buggalugs
I was hoping they would go back to a 2 slot cooler but at least they have dual link DVI on BOTH ports this time, and displayport 1.2.......and the card looks more solid with the backplate etc.

I had the the 6970 version for a while but the cooler assembly felt very flimsy and flexible, looks like they fixed that.
Posted on Reply
#12
arterius2
Asus missed out on my money several times just because they just won't give up on tri-slot coolers.
Posted on Reply
#13
Shihab
arnoo1they should go back to 2 slots, 3 slots is stupid:banghead:
radroke.static.memegenerator.net/cache/instances/400x/12/13077/13391563.jpg
Oh, haven't you heard ? Triple slot is the new fad :cool:

Really though, I've been sceptic about triple slot design myself, having a small mid tower case 'n all. But after seeing how cool these things run (I live in a desert btw) I lost all doubt. Besides, if you just carried one of these, your e-peen size would get multiplied by a 10 ;) :rockout:
Posted on Reply
#14
arterius2
ShihabyoooOh, haven't you heard ? Triple slot is the new fad :cool:

Really though, I've been sceptic about triple slot design myself, having a small mid tower case 'n all. But after seeing how cool these things run (I live in a desert btw) I lost all doubt. Besides, if you just carried one of these, your e-peen size would get multiplied by a 10 ;) :rockout:
clearly the benchmarks show that tri-slot design is not any better than a good double-slot design, such as the MSI Twin Frozer

as for the epeen, I'm kind of past the teenage stage where you have to show off to your friends your tacky LED lightshow case /w plastic window to boost self esteem. I'm more into an elegant and sleek setup these days.
Posted on Reply
#15
Delta6326
arterius2clearly the benchmarks show that tri-slot design is not any better than a good double-slot design, such as the MSI Twin Frozer

as for the epeen, I'm kind of past the teenage stage where you have to show off to your friends your tacky LED lightshow case /w plastic window to boost self esteem. I'm more into an elegant and sleek setup these days.
I totally agree with you. I want a new case that doesn't have lights and 6 case fans.
Want a Antec P280.

I just don't see the point of 3 slots, when the 7970 uses less power and creates less heat than 6970, we should be looking at smaller 2 slots and single slots cards.:banghead: I will only get a 3 slot cooler if I have a rotated M/B, so they are vertical less strain on the M/B slot.
Posted on Reply
#16
Shihab
arterius2clearly the benchmarks show that tri-slot design is not any better than a good double-slot design, such as the MSI Twin Frozer

as for the epeen, I'm kind of past the teenage stage where you have to show off to your friends your tacky LED lightshow case /w plastic window to boost self esteem. I'm more into an elegant and sleek setup these days.
I don't know about other brands but Asus ridiculously lowers the stock fan speed on their DC coolers to lower the noise. Give the fan speed alittle nudge and let's see if your twin frozr can catch up. I hear they are a little bit on the noisy side.

As for the looks, I guess each to their own. I wouldn't mind going back to being a "teenager" though.
Posted on Reply
#17
Disparia
:confused: Nine available 2-slot 7970s at Newegg. Even one by Asus, if you must have one by them. :confused:
Posted on Reply
#20
Mr McC
Very nice.

Just saw the new cases that accomodate Crossfire:

Posted on Reply
#21
jsfitz54
"A thing of beauty is a joy forever..."
Posted on Reply
#22
antuk15
What a pointless and stupidly over large heat sink...
Posted on Reply
#23
Vancha
antuk15What a pointless and stupidly over large heat sink...
If it's size allows it to cool as effectively as the best two-slot heatsinks while doing so much more quietly, is it still pointless?
Posted on Reply
#24
jihadjoe
imitationI can still remember back when the fastest graphics cards were small single-slot boards. What have we come to?
I can still remember back when the fastest CPUs didn't require heatsinks. What have we come to?
Posted on Reply
#25
SteelSix
I've never been a fan of triple slot, but with gpu's this powerful, is is safe to assume the majority needs only one card?

I'll take two doubles.. :D
Posted on Reply
Add your own comment
Nov 21st, 2024 12:57 EST change timezone

New Forum Posts

Popular Reviews

Controversial News Posts