Tuesday, October 27th 2009
Sapphire HD 5870 Vapor-X Detailed Further
First spotted soon after AMD's release of its flagship ATI Radeon HD 5870 accelerator, Sapphire's HD 5870 Vapor-X has finally taken shape. From the looks of it, the final iteration seems to be slightly different from the CGI drawing that made for the older report. Sapphire's design methodology seems to be revolving around giving AMD's reference PCB better cooling than AMD's own cooler. Perhaps owing to lavish use of high-grade digital-PWM circuitry, there is very little room for improvement, leaving room only for cost-cutting, which surprisingly, doesn't form part of Sapphire's new card.
Unlike an older prototype in which the cooler shroud doesn't seem to be fully covering the PCB, the redesigned shroud fits the PCB like a glove, enhancing its aesthetics. The Vapor-X cooler uses a vapor-chamber design, that accumulates and distributes heat to the cooler better. Aluminum fin blocks on either sides of the GPU block disperse heat under the fan's air-flow. The AMD Cypress GPU that powers it is DirectX 11 compliant, which features 1600 stream processors, and a 256-bit wide GDDR5 memory interface to connect to the 1 GB of memory onboard. Sapphire uses overclocked parameters, 870 MHz core (vs. 850 MHz reference), and 1250 MHz / effective 5.00 GHz memory (vs. 1200 MHz / 4.8 GHz reference). Sapphire's HD 5870 Vapor-X should be out in time for X-Mas.
Source:
Legit Reviews
Unlike an older prototype in which the cooler shroud doesn't seem to be fully covering the PCB, the redesigned shroud fits the PCB like a glove, enhancing its aesthetics. The Vapor-X cooler uses a vapor-chamber design, that accumulates and distributes heat to the cooler better. Aluminum fin blocks on either sides of the GPU block disperse heat under the fan's air-flow. The AMD Cypress GPU that powers it is DirectX 11 compliant, which features 1600 stream processors, and a 256-bit wide GDDR5 memory interface to connect to the 1 GB of memory onboard. Sapphire uses overclocked parameters, 870 MHz core (vs. 850 MHz reference), and 1250 MHz / effective 5.00 GHz memory (vs. 1200 MHz / 4.8 GHz reference). Sapphire's HD 5870 Vapor-X should be out in time for X-Mas.
39 Comments on Sapphire HD 5870 Vapor-X Detailed Further
Like that the back end is open as well, it means front intake fans can help force air out the vent!
The 4870s Vapor X coolers were MUCH better than the toxic ones, its gonna be interesting to see if they improved these coolers or if they use the same smashed closed heatpipes as the earlier ones.
If anyone finds a pict of the insides it would be really nice to see.
Looking closer at the 1st picture I do see heatpipes running off the center.
X was at least 5C cooler each time.
I had 2 of each to play with (thanks to Tzi) Here is a shot of the toxic tubes smashed closed
Here is a back side shot of the 2 dif coolers
Here is the dif in fans
The smaller fan on the Vapor X (with more blades) was much quieter as well
I would really like to see the insides of the new cooler and see if they changed anything
It looks like you could swap out that 92mm fan there & replace it with one of your own.
Ive still got an old 92mm LED fan that i took off a old Zalman flower cooler a while back. that would look totally bling with that on.
Im not an overall huge fan of vapour X coolers myself - or at least not the toxic ones anyway my 4870 toxic use to idle around 60-65'c untill I put some MX-2 on it & tweaked the fan profiles in the bios. now its more like 50-55'c idle.
I still keep the temps from hitting 70'c if i can.
I'd almost like it to start acting up. It would give me an excuse to upgrade to this sweet piece of silicon.
:(
EDIT: I double-checked the review of the HD 4890 that W1zzard did, but his had a reference PCB. Weird.
the thing that annoys me is the coil buzz, my experience of non-reference = no buzz/screech.