ASUS Radeon HD 7770 DirectCU 1 GB Review 5

ASUS Radeon HD 7770 DirectCU 1 GB Review

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Value and Conclusion

  • According to ASUS the HD 7770 DirectCU will retail at the AMD suggested pricing of $159.
  • 20% performance increase over last generation
  • Excellent energy efficiency
  • Overclocked out of the box
  • Extremely quiet
  • No power consumption increase despite overclock
  • Excellent GPU overclocking potential
  • Native full-size HDMI & DisplayPort output
  • Adds support for PCI-Express 3.0 and DirectX 11.1
  • Support for multiple independent audio streams
  • Price too high to be competitive
  • Lower memory OC potential than other cards
  • Memory overclock is small
  • CCC Overdrive limits too low
  • Voltage controller not very overclocker-friendly
AMD's new Radeon HD 7770 delivers a substantial improvement over the previous generation HD 5770. The HD 6770 was just a HD 5770 with a "6770" sticker slapped on it, so the upgrade has been overdue. Averaged over all our testing we see more than 20% higher performance from the reference clocked HD 7770 vs. the HD 5770. This puts the HD 7770 on the same performance level as NVIDIA's GeForce GTX 460, or a bit below the HD 6850.
We have seen great overclocking potential from the AMD HD 7900 Series, and the HD 7700 Series is just like it. Overclocking the cards well beyond 1 GHz is quite easy. We reached between 1140 and 1180 MHz on the cards tested today. Memory overclocks well, too, resulting in a total real-life performance improvement of about 15%.
AMD's new generation of graphics processors has great power consumption: below 70W during typical gaming is a first for this performance class. Idle power consumption is also down, at 7 Watts now, which is great for users who spend most of their time with productivity and rarely game. Overall performance per Watt is leading our charts, only to be bested by AMD's other card released today, the HD 7750.
The ASUS HD 7770 DirectCU uses the company's well established DirectCU heatsink that we have seen on many cards in the last months. The most impressive feat of this card is how silent it is. In both idle and load it is as quiet as I've ever seen on any card with a running fan. When installed in a typical system you will not hear the card over the other components. This makes the card an excellent choice for a low noise media PC system that can also handle light gaming. Even though it's very quiet, cooling performance and GPU overclocking potential did not suffer. Memory OC is a bit lower than on other cards, but is offset by the highest GPU clock potential we have seen on the cards tested today. ASUS has decided to price their board at the AMD MSRP, so the added value is really added value over the reference design, since there is no price premium charged for it.
Overall the HD 7770 is a good product with lots of potential, if there weren't the sky high price. AMD's officially suggested retailer pricing is "starting at $159", so we'll probably see retailers cashing in on these cards with inflated prices, like on the HD 7970 and HD 7950. Even at $159 the cards are way too expensive. They are up against the GTX 460 which is 20$ cheaper and delivers similar performance. HD 6850 ($135) and HD 6870 ($155) are faster, and give you much more bang for your buck, up to 30% more! If you are willing to shop used, you can find HD 5770 cards for well below $100, that have all the same major features and better price/performance, too. It seems that in its lower mid-range segment, the HD 7770 is the most expensive, least money-efficient card. However, I'm confident that AMD has lots of headroom on pricing for future price wars with NVIDIA. In my opinion a fair price for the HD 7770 would be below $130.
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Nov 25th, 2024 08:56 EST change timezone

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