Monday, January 23rd 2012
Radeon HD 7950 Specs Confirmed in GPU-Z Screenshot
Here is the first GPU-Z screenshot of a Radeon HD 7950 graphics card. Although put into a screenshot with ASUS GPU Tweak tool and Republic of Gamers-themed GPU-Z, the card doesn't appear to be an ASUS-made one, and is more likely HIS or PowerColor. The device ID checks out with the one HD 7950 has been associated with. Most other features match expectations. The HD 7950 is carved out of the 28 nm "Tahiti" GPU, with 28 GCN compute units (CUs) active, totaling 1,792 stream processors and 112 TMUs. The ROP count is untouched at 32, so is the memory, that's 3 GB GDDR5 across a 384-bit wide memory interface. With a memory clock of 5.00 GHz effective, it's churning out 240 GB/s of memory bandwidth. It's just the core clock speed where we weren't on target (from the previously-expected 800 MHz), either 880 MHz is the reference core clock speed of HD 7950, or this particular card is a factory-OC variant (PowerColor HD 7950 PCS?).
Source:
DonanimHaber
22 Comments on Radeon HD 7950 Specs Confirmed in GPU-Z Screenshot
Yeah I too think the 7950 will unlock to 7970:rockout:
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EDIT
W1zzard answers here: www.techpowerup.com/forums/showpost.php?p=2525710&postcount=18
#AnythingToKeepNDAContractSquickyClean
Anywho, I would like to point out the fact that according to several tech fellows and IT news journalists these new boards, (but more accuratly the chips) will feature -among other goodies- a distinguishably overall high overclockability. Now is it just me, or is this beginning to sound like bullsh*t marketing aimed at those pro-overclocker wannabes consumers?
Example: (imho)
So 6xx series with 30-40% lower watts/performance is where I'm looking.
Taken from: www.techpowerup.com/forums/showthread.php?p=2525716#post2525716
How can this be considered "not that fast"?
The HD7950 does look like an interesting card. Unlock ability is still up in the air though. Gibbo (purchasing manager over on OCUK forums) flashed a HD7950 with a HD7970 bios and GPU-z still read 1792 shaders. It also didn't perform the same as a HD7970 at the same clocks.
The potential is still there I think but it could be a case that the HD6950/HD6970 is the exception rather than the norm. The HD5850 didn't unlock after all, so who knows?!
eg: Bridges handle 4X the load ever expected of them, this reduces the potential to be weakened by fatigue, corrosion or extreme loads. Eg: Race Car engines, are better balanced, but even then the higher revs dramatically decrease their life.
Increasing the Clock Speed exponentially increases the Power Consumption & Heat Output of CPU’s & other electrical devices. Ie: The Failure Rates of 15,000RPM Hard Drives is much higher than those running at 5,400rpm.
So they ship at a spec they believe will be economical to run, to cool & with a lifespan long enough to run without error till it becomes obsolete.
If you are happy paying 2X for Cooling & 2X electricity for 20% perf increase & dramatically shortened component life. Then you will OC to the level you feel comfortable.
The trick is knowing what & how much you are giving up.
Console like quality? Since when is 3560x1920, high settings, Post AA and SSAO console like quality?
Considering I have extensively tested BF3 (I even have a thread about it FFS) I think I am quite versed in the relavent quality settings and there performance impact. The difference between High and Ultra in game is relatively minimal unless you like standing still and getting shot at.
Oh and for reference my HD7970 clocked at 1125/6600 pulls 58 FPS average at 1080p, Ultra Settings with 4x deffered AA. This is nearly twice as fast as my old HD6970....
Yes this damn HD7970 sucks....
Back to playing BF3 on my console quality Eyefinity setup :rolleyes: