Monday, July 6th 2015
ASUS Readies Radeon R9 Fury STRIX with DirectCU III Cooler
ASUS is reportedly giving final touches to an air-cooled Radeon R9 Fury (that's Fury without the "X") graphics card, based on its new-generation STRIX cooling solution. Listings of the card appeared online, with German retailer Computer PC Shop asking 623.90€ (including VAT) for it. If you remove the 19% VAT, you arrive at a price-tag of around 500€. This card is known to feature ASUS' DirectCU III triple-fan cooling solution, which made its debut with the R9 390X and GTX 980 Ti STRIX graphics cards. As for the SKU itself, the specs of the R9 Fury remain a mystery. AMD could lower the clocks, reduce the stream processor count, or a combination or the two. It still features 4 GB of HBM. Evidently, AMD allows its AIB partners to come up with custom-design boards for this SKU, which means a reference-design board is unlikely.
Source:
Eteknix
33 Comments on ASUS Readies Radeon R9 Fury STRIX with DirectCU III Cooler
Are they using 5cm fans?
Unless they make their own long PCBs, expect custom-design R9 Fury to look something like that.
geizhals.at/asus-strix-r9fury-dc3-4g-gaming-90yv08k0-m0nm00-a1291570.html
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Didn’t necessarily to perfectly scale and line up stuff, but the 4 mounting points of the interposer appear spread further apart than that cooler shown. Not to say they couldn't make some changes or adapter, but it doesn’t appear to be a simple bolt on.
The spacing of the mounting holes between cards using the same cooler on both vendors cards has differed for generations. Currently the spacing for Hawaii/Pitcairn/Tonga is 53.2mm, while GM 200/204/GK 110/104/GF 100/110 is 58.4mm. It is a relatively simple matter to machine a hold-down adapter (and placement of heatsink plates for power phases) for using the same cooler with both vendors.
Compare the holes of the MSI 980Ti (the black ones's) to Fury in relation to the PCI slot. not in the small ballpark.
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If people like me, with only a light engineering background, can draw up and CNC a custom plate for watercooling in a morning, I'm guessing that the resources of an AIB aren't going to be particularly taxed doing something similar. How you regard designing and machining a cold plate hold-down as some technological feat is beyond me when waterblock makers such as EK, Swiftech, AC, XSPC, Koolance release larger pieces with more intricate relief and raised moulding with virtually every AIB custom graphics card.
I suppose we hold to the... wait and see.
....so just how much heat are you expecting HBM to generate considering many 7Gbps GDDR5 equipped cards using 1.55V generating twice (or more) the amount of heat frequently receive no cooling whatsoever? I would think that the cold plate is a logical choice, if only to negate the chance of breaking the silicon during assembly. The plate is little more than a copper plate with a support edge to maintain rigidity - basically the same as the Fury X, without the need for machine screws that seal the lower and upper halves of the water chamber