Monday, January 16th 2012
Yeston AMD Branded Cost-Effective Tahiti PCB Pictured with Components Placed
Chinese AMD Radeon add-in board (AIB) partner and motherboard major Yeston, displayed a Radeon HD 7970 PCB, which bears the AMD branding, and is reportedly AMD's cost-effective "Tahiti" PCB. It is quite likely that this PCB will be used for Radeon HD 7950, apart from affordable HD 7970 cards. Radeon HD 7950, like its costlier sibling, will have a 384-bit wide GDDR5 memory interface.
Its designers seems to have done some clever cost-cutting which will make cards based on it more affordable (or at least more profitable), without sacrificing quality much. The PCB uses a 8+1+1 phase VRM, consisting of cost-effective ferrite core chokes, LFPAK MOSFETs, and probably a UPI-made VRM controller. Yeston will most likely use a top-flow cooler, and hence made room for two DVI connectors next to one each of HDMI 1.4a and standard DisplayPort 1.2. The dual-BIOS feature of AMD's high-end reference HD 7970 PCB is blanked out on this PCB.
Source:
Expreview
Its designers seems to have done some clever cost-cutting which will make cards based on it more affordable (or at least more profitable), without sacrificing quality much. The PCB uses a 8+1+1 phase VRM, consisting of cost-effective ferrite core chokes, LFPAK MOSFETs, and probably a UPI-made VRM controller. Yeston will most likely use a top-flow cooler, and hence made room for two DVI connectors next to one each of HDMI 1.4a and standard DisplayPort 1.2. The dual-BIOS feature of AMD's high-end reference HD 7970 PCB is blanked out on this PCB.
19 Comments on Yeston AMD Branded Cost-Effective Tahiti PCB Pictured with Components Placed
TBH that thing looks like it can surly and easily surpass the reference PCB quality, no sweat.
Maybe it's only the switch itself that's absent.
That could be easily fixed at home :)
Yeston Designs Radeon HD 5770 X2 Graphics Card
if anyone remember the post, bcs i do ^^
so this is doubly weird to see a non-reference board with AMD branding for sure...
they have a big vdoop imo they seem cheap vs this one... :laugh: