Thursday, January 19th 2012

ASUS Radeon HD 7970 DirectCu II Graphics Card Pictured

Here are the first pictures of ASUS' premium DirectCu II graphics card designed around AMD's Radeon HD 7970 GPU. The design is based on giving the GPU a powerful cooling solution, backed by a custom-design PCB. Since its cooling solution spans across three expansion slots, one of the three expansion slot brackets is productively used to provide additional display connectivity. To begin with, the PCB uses a 10+1+1 ASUS Digi+ VRM that draws power from two 8-pin PCIe power connectors. It supports heavy overclocking, and provides several voltage tuning features.

A common metal heatsink spans along the length of the card, making contact with VRM and memory components. On top of this sits the DirectCu II heatsink. This heatsink uses a large aluminum fin-stack heatsink to which heat from the GPU is conveyed by six heat-pipes, which make direct contact with it. The heatsink itself isn't very thick, but what makes the card span across three slots are its two 100 mm fans. The GPU is clocked out of the box at 1000 MHz (vs. 925 MHz reference), and 5.60 GHz/1400 MHz actual memory (vs. 5.50 GHz/1375 MHz actual reference).
This card also features what is called "VGA Hotwire", which is a 2-pin cable, one end of which needs to be soldered onto the graphics card, the other is plugged into a special header on ROG Rampage IV series motherboards. This allows advanced users to eliminate the need for variable resistors and use the motherboard's voltage controller to tune come key voltage domains of the graphics card as if it were the motherboard's.

Display outputs include two dual-link DVI and four full-size DisplayPort 1.2 connectors. The card is 11 inches (27.94 cm) long, and we mentioned earlier spans across three expansion slots in your case. ASUS' previous-generation DirectCu II cards based on GeForce GTX 580/570 and Radeon HD 6970/6950 were just as big. Pricing information is not available.
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31 Comments on ASUS Radeon HD 7970 DirectCu II Graphics Card Pictured

#26
LAN_deRf_HA
Most people shouldn't be complaining about this. On a modern board you can fit this and at least 3 other add-on cards. And the number of people who can afford to run two of these is rather small, or rather the number of people who can afford it and are willing.
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#27
Horrux
LAN_deRf_HAMost people shouldn't be complaining about this. On a modern board you can fit this and at least 3 other add-on cards. And the number of people who can afford to run two of these is rather small, or rather the number of people who can afford it and are willing.
Not if some of those add-on cards are also triple slot video cards. Right now I'm using two double-slotters and I have to be careful when changing mobos to pick a model that will allow me access to a PCI slot for my sound card with two double-slot graphics cards. Triple-slotters are a nightmare and seriously impinge on upgradability.
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#29
Horrux
Taurus_G4Any rough guess on pricing?
Rough guess would be somewhat higher than the current 7970s, so estimate $650-$700, given the overclock on these babies.
Posted on Reply
#30
alexsubri
So the question is 7950 crossfire ...or 7970 Directcu II
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#31
crazyeyesreaper
Not a Moderator
well card looks good max temps arorund 70c at a clock speed of 1010mhz from the factory, looks like they got it up to 1220mhz when my boss was there

www.legitreviews.com/article/1839/1/

Ill probably pick one up simply do to the fact that it has a BACK PLATE
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