Thursday, April 23rd 2020
PowerColor Announces Radeon RX 5600 XT ITX Graphics Card
PowerColor today rolled out its Radeon RX 5600 XT ITX graphics card optimized for smaller gaming PC builds (model: AXRX 5600XT ITX 6GBD6-2DH). This card features an identical board design to the Radeon RX 5700 ITX the company launched back in December 2019. It is 17.9 cm long and 11 cm tall. The card uses a dense aluminium fin-stack heatsink with four nickel-plated copper heat pipes; ventilated by a single 80 mm fan, and offers idle fan-off.
The PowerColor RX 5600 XT ITX ticks at AMD-reference clock speeds of 1560 MHz boost, 1375 MHz game clocks, and 12 Gbps (GDDR6-effective) memory. It draws power from a single 8-pin PCIe power connector. Display outputs include two DisplayPort 1.4, and one HDMI 2.0b. Based on the 7 nm "Navi 10" silicon, the Radeon RX 5600 XT features 2,304 RDNA stream processors, 144 TMUs, 64 ROPs, and a 192-bit wide GDDR6 memory interface, holding 6 GB of memory. UK retailer Scan Computers has it listed for £299.
The PowerColor RX 5600 XT ITX ticks at AMD-reference clock speeds of 1560 MHz boost, 1375 MHz game clocks, and 12 Gbps (GDDR6-effective) memory. It draws power from a single 8-pin PCIe power connector. Display outputs include two DisplayPort 1.4, and one HDMI 2.0b. Based on the 7 nm "Navi 10" silicon, the Radeon RX 5600 XT features 2,304 RDNA stream processors, 144 TMUs, 64 ROPs, and a 192-bit wide GDDR6 memory interface, holding 6 GB of memory. UK retailer Scan Computers has it listed for £299.
12 Comments on PowerColor Announces Radeon RX 5600 XT ITX Graphics Card
www.techpowerup.com/265853/asrock-launches-the-radeon-rx-5500-xt-challenger-itx-8g-graphics-cards
Though I might be waiting for the ray-traced variant of AMD GPUs, my next card will likely be a Powercolor ITX later if not moving to Nvidia (where Zotac has a line-up of ITX card).
@W1zzard Would be great if you can get an ITX 5700 to review too as @Mark Little noted. Same reason ITX motherboards are overpriced - you're paying for the form factor. Although in the motherboard case, it's generally because some serious engineering has to be done to fit all the components onto the PCB... in the case of this card, 5600 PCB is already this size anyway, so it's just ripping the consumer off.