Tuesday, March 1st 2011

AMD Radeon HD 6990 Press Deck Leaked

While it is slated for release on the 8th of this month, AMD's Radeon HD 6990 was detailed to sections of the industry. It wasn't long before someone leaked the press deck, revealing all the specifications and AMD performance estimates. The Radeon HD 6990 is a dual-GPU graphics card making use of two AMD Cayman GPUs in internal CrossFire. Cayman is the same GPU that is at the center of Radeon HD 6950 and HD 6970.

In the HD 6990, each Cayman is configured to use all 1536 of its VLIW4 stream processors. The GPU core is clocked at 830 MHz, and memory at 1250 MHz (5.00 GHz GDDR5 effective). The 256-bit wide memory interface of each GPU is populated with 2 GB of memory, setting the total board memory to 4 GB. Display IO includes five connectors, including one DVI and four mini-DisplayPort 1.2. While the HD 6990 is said to outperform GeForce GTX 580, AMD is also bracing itself for NVIDIA's dual-GPU GTX 590, with HD 6990 OC variants following an official specification of 880 MHz core, and the same 5.00 GHz memory.
Two power two GPUs with over 2.64 billion transistors, you need a lot of power. AMD has engineered its PCB to deliver up to 450W of power. This should give you a rough idea of what the HD 6990 will draw with its PowerTune feature disabled. AMD is known for using high-quality digital PWM components on its high-end reference boards, the trend is kept up with. The HD 6990 uses two 4+2 phase PWM circuitry per GPU. The inductors and PWM chips are hand-picked to offer the least leakage and highest efficiency. The PowerTune technology throttles power to ensure the best energy efficiency. This is both a boon and a bane for enthusiasts.

Lastly, the business-end of the presentation. AMD will have relaxed CCC overdrive limits to let you crank up the clock speeds. With a typical max board power of 375W and a PCB designed for 450W, there should be some a decent overclocking headroom. In its comparison with NVIDIA products, AMD used the GeForce GTX 580, the green team's fastest graphics card. When put through batteries of DirectX 9, DirectX 10/10.1, DirectX 11, and OpenGL game tests, AMD claims its HD 6990 to be faster than GTX 580 by 67% average, and up to 110% faster in some cases. The HD 6990 OC variant is claimed to push that a little higher, with up to 8% increase in performance over the HD 6990 reference.
Source: DonanimHaber
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48 Comments on AMD Radeon HD 6990 Press Deck Leaked

#26
Unregistered
wow, amd going nuts, maybe they have enough trailing behind nvdia, and said fuck with power consumetion and let this sucker eat your electricity like no tomorrow. Lol
#27
jpierce55
The idle power consumption is pretty low, and that does count for something. The price is what will matter!
Posted on Reply
#29
983264
Those things will matter in reviews, if they are true or not...
Posted on Reply
#30
pr0n Inspector
It's March already, how many people still care about it?
Posted on Reply
#31
yogurt_21
ok nice press slides now where's the actual reviews?

we know both nv and amd over-exaggerate on their press slides.
Posted on Reply
#32
1Kurgan1
The Knife in your Back
People who have the money. I'll probably just get 6950's, this gen looks nice, but I was hoping for a bit more performance from it. But since the 6950 unlocks so well, it really is a gem.
Posted on Reply
#33
jpierce55
The power consumption is high, but it should have been expected in what is basically two cards together. The 375 watt is stock, and what should be looked at, not the 450.

Compare the 375 to the power use of a 570, 580, or 5970. www.techpowerup.com/reviews/ASUS/GeForce_GTX_570_Direct_Cu_II/21.html It is higher than I would have expected, but not unearthly so. I would hope it can beat the 580 in performance!
Posted on Reply
#34
OneCool
W1zzardamd spelling fail

AMD
Ur
Spelling
sUcks
Much
TOO FUNNY :roll:


Dual BIOS OC switch? Why not!! Thats a cool idea.

That way people could just mod the OC bios and always have the stock just a flip of a switch away..cool :cool:


What happens when the "noob" thinks its a good idea to flip that switch while the cards running? BOOM!!!
Posted on Reply
#35
nINJAkECIL
some shop here in Indonesia already opened pre-order for Powercolor HD6990 @ US$750.

link

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Posted on Reply
#36
largon
Four VRM phases for each GPU using Volterra VT1195SFs. That is, Volterra's most powerful parts. The same VRMs as on R600/HD2900XT.
Posted on Reply
#37
Nailezs
grammer error!
btarunrTwo power two GPUs with over 2.64 billion transistors, you need a lot of power.
should be "To power two GPUs..."
Posted on Reply
#38
largon
btarunrThe inductors and PWM chips are hand-picked to offer the least leakage and highest efficiency
The slide says the ASICs (= GPUs) are screened for high speed and low leakage, not the VRM components.
Posted on Reply
#39
cdawall
where the hell are my stars
hey its finally a card that draws more than the 4870X2
Posted on Reply
#40
Sihastru
I'm a bit disappointed that nobody posted an image of a nuclear power plant yet.
Posted on Reply
#41
treboRR
I'm a bit disappointed that nobody posted an image of a nuclear power plant yet.
HERE U GOOO:roll:

Posted on Reply
#42
bokou
I figured out in Photoshop using one of the photos from HARDOCP that the thing is probably going to be in the neighborhood of 13.5" long... whip out the tape measure and measure your case!!

edit: here's the picture I used to measure the pixels and reach that conclusion
Posted on Reply
#43
jpierce55
LOL, a little longer and they can add a cold air intake on the front of the card. (from where it is poking through the bottom of the case that is ;))
Posted on Reply
#44
Unregistered
Anyone notice that is have 4 DP ports? I think in theory you can get 8 monitors to run alone on those ports...
#45
Fourstaff
TAViXAnyone notice that is have 4 DP ports? I think in theory you can get 8 monitors to run alone on those ports...
But practically no one uses display port.... :p
Posted on Reply
#46
HalfAHertz
TAViXAnyone notice that is have 4 DP ports? I think in theory you can get 8 monitors to run alone on those ports...
It should be 12 not 8. Each DP 1.3 should support 3 monitors through a hub.
Posted on Reply
#47
Aceman.au
HalfAHertzIt should be 12 not 8. Each DP 1.3 should support 3 monitors through a hub.
Cause we all have 12 screens
Posted on Reply
#48
WarEagleAU
Bird of Prey
Very cool indeed. I Am soon to move to either the dual 6950 board or a single 6950.
Posted on Reply
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