Monday, March 4th 2013

AMD Redoing Radeon HD 7990 Under New Codename - "Malta"

AMD topped off its "Southern Islands" graphics card family with Radeon HD 7990 "New Zealand," although it didn't have a reference design board of the said SKU. Around October 2012, AIB partners PowerColor, VTX3D, and Club 3D each released their custom design Radeon HD 7990-branded graphics cards, which packed a duo of Radeon HD 7970 GPUs, a total of 6 GB of memory, making up for a dual-GPU solution. Among most of these, the GPUs were clocked in the neighborhood of 950 MHz, and memory at 5.50 GHz. ASUS joined the party much later with the ROG ARES II, with 1100 MHz core, 6.00 GHz memory, and liquid cooling, but commands a hefty $1,600. Post GTX Titan, ARES II remains, at least according to AMD, the single fastest graphics card. The company seems interested in standardizing a new set of specifications for HD 7990, which could be priced competitively against NVIDIA's GTX Titan and GTX 690.

Enter the new Radeon HD 7990 "Malta," a new codename, redone specifications (clock speeds), same dual-GPU graphics card, with [hopefully] a competitive price. Its development checks out with AMD's recent statement in its teleconference last month, where it stated that we could see "more HD 7990 action" this year. According to a Technic3D report, AMD is looking to replace the generally accepted 925/950/1350 MHz (core/PowerTune Boost/memory) clock speed standard of the HD 7990 with something over 1000 MHz, probably even 1050 MHz for the core. There is no word on memory clock speed changes, although with its 384-bit wide memory interfaces, we don't imagine the "Tahiti" GPU to be facing a dearth of memory bandwidth. The HD 7990 "Malta" like the HD 7990 "New Zealand," will lack an AMD reference design, so one could expect more custom-design cards by partners. The new SKU could launch some time before July.
Source: Technic3D
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43 Comments on AMD Redoing Radeon HD 7990 Under New Codename - "Malta"

#1
Zubasa
So this is basically just 7990 Ghz Edition? :wtf:
The existing 7990s either have an OC bios or are already clocked beyond 1Ghz anyways.
I don't see the point.
Posted on Reply
#2
dj-electric
The only thing that went through my mind reading this is the question how much domesticated this card will be. How elegantly they will handle the heat.
Posted on Reply
#3
AsRock
TPU addict
lack an AMD reference design
Lost interest right there.. I hate keep having to buy a new cooler every time although this MK-13 has served me well though since the 4k range.

Will have to see what pops up and how different the fittings are.
Posted on Reply
#4
radrok
Three words.

Too damn late.
Posted on Reply
#5
OnePostWonder
In case anyone is curious, Malta is Italian for "malt".
Posted on Reply
#6
acerace
When I see or heard word Malta, I immediately think Tenishia. :D
Posted on Reply
#7
Xzibit
The original source is Fudzilla and was published Feb 21, 2013, 11day old news. :confused:

Even VideoCardz had this on Feb 21. :shadedshu
Posted on Reply
#8
reverze
these will be better binned chips, so they can get those clocks without higher voltage and heat. And at the same time they will try to price it more agressively. I say this can turn out very well.
Posted on Reply
#11
Xzibit
Malta is referance to the Maltese Islands which fits into there Island naming scheme.
Posted on Reply
#12
Frick
Fishfaced Nincompoop
reverzethese will be better binned chips, so they can get those clocks without higher voltage and heat. And at the same time they will try to price it more agressively. I say this can turn out very well.
Priced correctly it can be excellent.
Posted on Reply
#14
xvi
Not too late, right on time. AMD has experience when it comes to gluing two cards together on one board and if they're not releasing any new GPUs, this could be an inexpensive and easy way for them to remain in the market. Two 7970s give a decent bit more performance than a Titan (and a whole heck of a lot more compute performance) and they cost a bit less. Quite a bit less. 2.5x less.

Extending the lifetime of the HD 7000 series should help drive AMD's manufacturing cost down and allow them to maintain a profit while lowering prices. The 7970 is a strong card and I wouldn't be surprised if AMD just rode it out, lowering the price as nVidia gains the lead, until they're mostly done fulfilling their contracts with Sony and Nintendo. Who knows. Maybe we'll even see a tri-GPU HD 7995 if AMD is lazy enough.

TPU's review shows the 7970 GHz edition to be about 80% performance of the Titan. For the price of, to make this easy, two Titan cards (200% the performance of one Titan), one could buy 5 7970s (400% the performance of one Titan). This is, of course, ignoring power and space requirements, but that's what a 7990 would address. 60% more performance for less money.

The only bad thing I see here is nVidia will have the high-end market all to themselves which, I suspect, will cause them to go mad with power and start charging an arm and a leg for their products. I expect AMD to happily play the waiting game here. It doesn't sound like nVidia has a new architecture ready anyways. If they did, they wouldn't dare make the Titan obsolete by releasing it now.

I'm not saying the Titan isn't an impressive card, and even though I personally prefer AMD, I still tip my hat to nVidia. It's just not as impressive as the price would imply and that leaves a lot of room for AMD to, just as this article says, slide in a very cost effective and sensible HD 7990.
Posted on Reply
#15
Xzibit
FluffmeisterI guess $550 should be reasonable.
Havent you been paying attention.

If it performs faster than 690 they can charge as much as they want and if you disagree your not the targeted audiance and shouldnt complain about it.

:laugh:
Posted on Reply
#16
Law-II
Hi

I have owned a few dual GPU/VPU cards and will say, they are great on paper and have impressive specs.

However leave a lot to be desired when it comes to application and game compatibility as and when software devs do not always write code for these vga cards. When this happens you are left with the performance of a single GPU on occasions less than 40% GPU usage across both GPU's. [*then it's not great for the price tag]

atb

Law-II
Posted on Reply
#17
Fluffmeister
XzibitHavent you been paying attention.

If it performs faster than 690 they can charge as much as they want and if you disagree your not the targeted audiance and shouldnt complain about it.

:laugh:
Indeed! But considering the 690 launched 10 months ago I should certainly hope so. It will be like 14 months old when this thing arrives. :O

I hope they charge the earth personally. ;)
Posted on Reply
#18
Depth
ZubasaSo this is basically just 7990 Ghz Edition? :wtf:
The existing 7990s either have an OC bios or are already clocked beyond 1Ghz anyways.
I don't see the point.
Well I think the point is that nVidia has a flagship product with an actual name.

Therefore AMD needs a flagship product with an actual name.
Posted on Reply
#19
Xzibit
FluffmeisterIndeed! But considering the 690 launched 10 months ago I should certainly hope so. It will be like 14 months old when this thing arrives. :O

I hope they charge the earth personally. ;)
Just wanted to check your not delusional.
FluffmeisterYeah it's not too hard to understand, although the people that voted $550 and lower are rather delusional.
;)
Posted on Reply
#20
Fluffmeister
Seeing as you haven't worked it out yet, I was being sarcastic.

Impressive work though :P
Posted on Reply
#21
de.das.dude
Pro Indian Modder
wonder if BP will buy one now :D
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#22
Prima.Vera
What's the point? Half of the console ports don't work properly on CrossFire anyways...ESPECIALLY those marked TWIMTBP... ;)
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#23
TheoneandonlyMrK
Prima.VeraWhat's the point? Half of the console ports don't work properly on CrossFire anyways...ESPECIALLY those marked TWIMTBP... ;)
That's not going to be many going forward. Ive used crossfire for years and agree there can be issues but they're resolved reasonably quick normally and only tend to happen close to release .just saying it ain't as bad as all that.
This card however is as bad as all that. Late hot and dear, not a good combo.
Posted on Reply
#24
badtaylorx
i think AMD is missing a good opportunity here.

a twin tahiti le chip based card would have been a great fit here.... much more powerful than a 7970, and much cheaper too, oh well
Posted on Reply
#25
Casecutter
XzibitThe original source is Fudzilla and was published Feb 21, 2013, 11day old news. :shadedshu
reverzethese will be better binned chips, so they can get those clocks without higher voltage and heat. And at the same time they will try to price it more agressively. I say this can turn out very well.
xviNot too late, ... It's just not as impressive as the price would imply and that leaves a lot of room for AMD to, just as this article says, slide in a very cost effective and sensible HD 7990.
I'd think a price of $750, while 1Ghz and boost with better on power than the OEM specials 7990. Given its "Malta" designation I'm even wondering if this isn't a chip that's on new silicon... not exactly "Tahiti" based? I mean "New Zealand" was the original designator for the dual "Tahiti", while now hearing "Malta"... something changed. We also know AMD is talking about Bonaire XT (7790) coming, could this also be a "re-spin" with a die size that might be little less (or more) than Tahiti? With some juggling of texture/pixels/transistors that keep as fast, but better on power? We know that dual Tahiti are handily besting a Titian, but AMD probably is looking at a better power envelope as to be in the GTX690 area.
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