Sunday, February 11th 2007
Info on the R600 – it’s big
VR-Zone claims to have dug up a bit more information on AMD's R600, the company's flagship DirectX 10 card. When it launches there should be both XTX and XT versions of the card. The XTX, with 1GB GDDR4 memory, will have OEM and retail versions - the OEM (pictured above) will measure 12.4" and consume 270W of power, whilst the 9.5" retail version will use 240W. The XT version of the R600 will have 512MB of GDDR3 memory, being 9.5" long and using 240W of power. The XL version of the card is expected to be released at a later date.
Source:
VR-Zone
45 Comments on Info on the R600 – it’s big
These "20" feet long cards are a real nuisance. I should know cuz I just put in an x1950 pro in my rig. I had watercooling on my cpu, gpu and northbridge but had to remove everything but the cpu block and the kitchen sink to accomodate my new card. Before you know it graphic cards will be external cuz they'll be too big...
Its like needing a heart transplant and being told you can only have a whales, and thusly you will need your kidneys and liver and pretty much everything else removed just to get in in.. well soz for the anatomy reference but hell, its gonna b surgery time on my pc if i get me a dx10 card. God help any1 who wants them in sli......
Edit.. I seen info on pciE extension cables, so maybe well need to glue the card to the outside of our cases haha :p
that must run hot look at how many heatpipes there are
where are the vents for the fan to suck air
what is that black plastic looking thing at the end, it looks like a handle
Let alone 1gig or more.
Check out the performance differences between a x1950 256 and a x1950 512...
It's near and most the time absolutely nothing to a gamer.
What do you think they made rack mount for :rockout:
Do they mean the 3rd party manufacturers put on other coolers?
Always was a bit confused about what OEM and retail really is.:banghead:
cya later
retail is for shops to sell one by one to us :)
Probably not for a long time though, considering Nvidia, and ATI compete monthly on the best graphics card.
S1iP
It's the higher resolutions where it tells a little, 1280 x 1024 and below and there is little or no difference, benching in 2005 and 2006 does not show a difference because 2005 tests at 1024 x 768 and 2006 tests at 1280 x 1024.
While Intel was able to reduce power consumption and add performance, graphic cards do exactly the opposite...