Tuesday, October 13th 2009

Sapphire Announces its Radeon HD 5700 Series Graphics Accelerators

Following the storming success of the recently introduced SAPPHIRE HD 5800 series, SAPPHIRE Technology now introduces the HD 5700 series, setting new standards for performance, value for money and features.

Only the second product line to fully support the forthcoming DirectX 11 from Microsoft, the new HD 5700 series brings many of the exciting architectural and performance features of the HD 5800 series to users on lower budgets. The HD 5700 series is based on a new GPU from the ATI division of AMD built in low power 40nm technology. This new series includes support for the new instruction set of DirectCompute 11, hardware tessellation, accelerated multi-threading capability, support for ATI Stream and the ability to display across up to three monitors simultaneously with ATI Eyefinity.
The new SAPPHIRE HD 5770 has 800 Stream Processors - the same number as top of the range cards in the previous generation - and is fitted with 1GB of GDDR5 memory connected via a new high speed 128-bit memory interface. Clocks are 850MHz core and 1200MHz (4800MHz effective) for the memory delivering excellent performance. Designed to be installed in a PCI-Express 2.0 x16 slot, the SAPPHIRE HD 5770 also has two CrossFire connectors on its upper edge, allowing up to four of these cards to be used together for enhanced performance in a suitable CrossFireX enabled mainboard. It has two Dual-link DVI, one HDMI and one DisplayPort connector on the bracket.

The SAPPHIRE HD 5750 is a SAPPHIRE original design bringing unrivalled performance, features and value for money. It has 720 Stream Processors and is fitted with 1GB of GDDR5 memory, again with the new high performance 128-bit memory interface. Clocks are 700MHz core and 1150MHZ (4600MHZ effective) for the memory, delivering the best performance in its class. Native CrossFire support again allows multiple cards to be used in a suitable CrossFireX enabled system. The SAPPHIRE HD 5750 is a low power graphics solution requiring only one 6-pin power connector (adapter supplied) and drawing only 86W under load and a very low 16W when in 2D or Windows desktop mode. The shorter PCB is easily installed in any PC case, and the speed controlled fan assisted cooler is very quiet in operation. Two Dual-link DVI, one HDMI and one DisplayPort connectors are provided.

Both of the cards in the SAPPHIRE HD 5700 series support the new ATI Eyefinity mode which allows up to three monitors to be used simultaneously from one GPU.

Both of these new SAPPHIRE models support accelerated rendering and video transcoding applications with ATI Stream. Both models also have the latest generation of built-in UVD (Universal Video Decoder) delivering smooth decoding of Blu-ray and HD DVD content for both VC-1 and H.264 codecs, as well as Mpeg files. In the SAPPHIRE HD 5700 series the UVD is able to decode two 1080p HD video streams simultaneously and is able to display HD video in high quality with Windows Aero mode enabled. HDMI capability has also been upgraded to HDMI 1.3a with Dolby TrueHD and DTS-HD Master Audio support.

SAPPHIRE HD 5700 series cards are available from 13th October 2009. Full retail versions of the cards will include a coupon for the exciting new driving game, Dirt2 - one of the first of a new generation of titles to fully utilise the capabilities of DirectX 11.
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9 Comments on Sapphire Announces its Radeon HD 5700 Series Graphics Accelerators

#1
theorw
i am warning u !Never buy the second pic vga!That exact 5750!
It brings the crappy cooler of the sapphire 4850 dualslot!
MASSIVE overheating issues!!!
Posted on Reply
#2
ZoneDymo
theorwi am warning u !Never buy the second pic vga!That exact 5750!
It brings the crappy cooler of the sapphire 4850 dualslot!
MASSIVE overheating issues!!!
and you know that how?
Posted on Reply
#3
Delta6326
theorwi am warning u !Never buy the second pic vga!That exact 5750!
It brings the crappy cooler of the sapphire 4850 dualslot!
MASSIVE overheating issues!!!
Umm? i have 2 of the Sapphire 4850's with dualslot in CF and my top one idles at 39c and my bottom one idles at 43c i have not replaced any thing on them and they never go above 56c at load you must have gotten or seen defective ones
Posted on Reply
#4
csendesmark
theorwi am warning u !Never buy the second pic vga!That exact 5750!
It brings the crappy cooler of the sapphire 4850 dualslot!
MASSIVE overheating issues!!!
That 5750 TDP is 86W, that (ugly) cooler can cool it!
Posted on Reply
#5
mosheen
yeah same here.
had a sapphire 4850 use to idle @ 36*c with fan @1%, did clock it down in 2d though. 250/500.
they were actually pretty good, running OC 735/1050 in 3d @75*c.
u must have really bad cooling in ur case.
Posted on Reply
#6
theorw
@ everyone that had that cooler on your cards,mine went @3d @86 degrees and i dont have a bad case,i have a 932...
While the other,musashi cooled,4850 reached early 60s voltmoded 1,34 volts.Dualslot was only bios voltmodded and it reached 86 so this IS a crappy cooler for me.
Maybe for the 5750 it will work different though but i d prefer any other brand than sapphire with that specific cooler...
Posted on Reply
#7
aj28
theorw@ everyone that had that cooler on your cards,mine went @3d @86 degrees and i dont have a bad case,i have a 932...
While the other,musashi cooled,4850 reached early 60s voltmoded 1,34 volts.Dualslot was only bios voltmodded and it reached 86 so this IS a crappy cooler for me.
Maybe for the 5750 it will work different though but i d prefer any other brand than sapphire with that specific cooler...
First off, if you voltmod your card you're going to see a huge increase in heat no matter what cooler you're using. Also, by using modified BIOS, you probably inadvertently disabled PowerPlay functionality, meaning further reduced energy efficiency and high heat.

Oh, and the 5750 has a lower TDP anyway, and this isn't the exact same cooler the 4850's used. Different fan and sheath... You really can't make those kinds of assumptions without actually trying one out.
Posted on Reply
#8
theorw
aj28You really can't make those kinds of assumptions without actually trying one out.
I already told you that i owned both reference cooled and dual slot 4850 in the past and i was disappointed form that cooler even @stock and powerplay ON 160/250!!!
Its a cooler that i wouldnt buy a card with...
Posted on Reply
#9
PP Mguire
He meant the 5750. You obviously dont have one so therefor cant make an assumption based on an un-educated guess on the fact that you didnt like STOCK cooling with a VOLTmod.
Posted on Reply
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