Friday, December 20th 2019

PowerColor Readies SFF-friendly Radeon RX 5700 ITX: Single 8-pin, Idle-Fan-Off

PowerColor is readying a small form-factor friendly custom-design Radeon RX 5700 graphics card, called simply the PowerColor RX 5700 ITX. With a length of 17.5 cm, standard 11 cm height, and strictly 2-slot thickness, the card uses a dense aluminium fin-stack heatsink with four 6 mm-thick nickel-plated copper heat pipes that make direct contact with the GPU at the base, ventilated by a single 80 mm fan. More interestingly, the card draws power from a single 8-pin PCIe power connector (225 W max power input for the connector + PCIe slot).

Unsurprisingly, the PowerColor RX 5700 ITX sticks to AMD-reference clock-speeds of 1465 MHz base, 1625 MHz gaming, and 1725 MHz boost, with the memory ticking at 14 Gbps (GDDR6-effective). Despite its compact cooling solution, the card does not skimp on idle-fan-off. Display outputs include two DisplayPort 1.4, and one HDMI 2.0. Based on the 7 nm "Navi 10" silicon, the RX 5700 features 2,304 stream processors across 36 RDNA compute units, 144 TMUs, 64 ROPs, and a 256-bit wide GDDR6 memory interface, holding 8 GB of memory. PowerColor didn't reveal pricing of the card, as it will formally launch it later this month.
Source: Hermitage Akihabara
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32 Comments on PowerColor Readies SFF-friendly Radeon RX 5700 ITX: Single 8-pin, Idle-Fan-Off

#26
B-Real
Liquid CoolThat's design isn't too far from my little Sapphire RX 570 Pulse ITX. Probably the best card I've ever purchased...runs as cool as a cucumber.

Best,

Liquid Cool
I can confirm that. Purchased a Sapphire RX 570 Pulse ITX for 118 EUR with the selectable Borderlands 3/Breakpoint game and the 3 month Game Pass (replacing a 2 year old GTX 1050 Ti purchased for a BF price of 121 EUR :D). With 100% GPU usage, it consumes 120W and the fans spin at 40%. When I used the Radeon software (and YT) for tweaking, I got 110w power consumption, 40% fan speed and got a 6-7% performance jump. :)
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#27
iO
Around $450 from amazon.co.jp If you want to import it yourself.
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#28
jabbadap
lexluthermiesterThis is one thing I like AMD for. I like NVidia, but their micromanaging of everyone sucks.

That having been said, there have been ITX versions of GTX cards. Looking forward to RTX versions.
Uhm, there is plenty of RTX ITX cards out there. Even out of more power hungry RTX 2070 from different AIBs.
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#29
notb
lexluthermiesterThis is one thing I like AMD for. I like NVidia, but their micromanaging of everyone sucks.
Sucks because (assuming it exists)?
You're missing something in the sea of Nvidia-based cards? They have faulty drivers or bad support? They're hard to get? They're just copies of poor reference design? What is it?
That having been said, there have been ITX versions of GTX cards. Looking forward to RTX versions.
pcpartpicker.com/products/video-card/#c=436,446,425,447,427,448,424&L=69000000,188000000
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#30
lexluthermiester
notbWhat is it?
A lot of needless limits on configuration specs such as custom boards and whatnot.
jabbadapUhm, there is plenty of RTX ITX cards out there. Even out of more power hungry RTX 2070 from different AIBs.
notbpcpartpicker.com/products/video-card/#c=436,446,425,447,427,448,424&L=69000000,188000000
Allow me to rephrase, I would like to see ITX versions of the 2070s & 2080/2080s. 2060's are alright, but not quite want some users are looking for.
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#31
MagnuTron
I honestly find it interesting how different AIB designs can be, and still stay within the same chipset. Amazing
Posted on Reply
#32
DeathtoGnomes
I think a card like this would perform better in a 5600XT variant.
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