Sapphire HD 7970 Toxic 6 GB Review 48

Sapphire HD 7970 Toxic 6 GB Review

Test Setup »

A Closer Look

Graphics Card Cooler Front
Graphics Card Cooler Back

Sapphire's cooler uses a large copper vapor chamber to soak up heat from the GPU surface. You can also see the thermal pads that cool the memory chips on the front side of the GPU.


Once we remove the main heatsink, you can see many smaller heatsinks that keep voltage-regulation circuitry cool.


Sapphire has also installed a metal backplate that cools the memory chips on the back side and has an additional thermal pad to help with VRM cooling.

Graphics Card Power Plugs

The card requires two 8-pin PCI-Express power cables for operation. This power configuration is good for up to 375 W of power draw.


This button located near the CrossFire connectors, switches between two BIOSes on the card. On other HD 7900 Series cards, this dual BIOS feature acts just as a safeguard against problems during BIOS flashing. On the Sapphire Toxic, this feature has been extended to provide a BIOS that runs clocks beyond Sapphire's default clock for the HD 7970 at higher voltage, to ensure stability, which will influence power/heat/noise.


For voltage control the card uses a CHiL CHL8228G, which is a common voltage controller nowadays. It offers software voltage control, comprehensive monitoring features, and is well supported by most overclocking software.

Graphics Card Memory Chips

The GDDR5 memory chips are made by Hynix and carry the model number H5GQ2H24MFR-R0C. They are specified to run at 1500 MHz (6000 MHz GDDR5 effective).

Graphics Chip GPU

AMD's Tahiti graphics processor introduced the GCN shader architecture. it is also the first GPU to be produced on a 28 nm process at TSMC. The transistor count is 4.31 billion.
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