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On Thursday, we got to see the first images of PowerColor's new Radeon HD 7970 Vortex Edition graphics card. At CES we got to take a closer look at its VRM. PowerColor carried forward the VRM design of its Radeon HD 6970 Devil 13 graphics card. At the heart of the VRM is a CHiL CHL8228 VRM controller, which allows software volt-modding using most of the popular tools out there. The card uses an 8+1+1 phase VRM. It uses High Current Power Beat chokes which offers PWM frequency range of up to 3 MHz.
Interestingly, while the HD 6970 Devil 13 itself, like the Radeon HD 7970 AMD reference board, used expensive International Rectifier DirectFETs in typical configuration, the HD 7970 Votex uses cost-effective driver-MOSFET (DrMOS) chips that appear to be made by Renesas. Cost effective doesn't necessarily mean "cheap", these chips, according to PowerColor, offer 93% efficiency with up to 1 MHz switching frequency. On the reverse side of the PCB, we can find the power stage to be complemented with SP capacitors that offer 40% lower ESR with and support higher switching frequencies.
This doesn't change our matter-of-fact observation from the older article that PowerColor used cost-effective components (compared to the CPL-made chokes and International Rectifier DirectFETs featured on AMD reference PCB), but that doesn't necessarily make it lower quality. AMD has a knack of going overkill with component quality on its reference boards that offer little real-world advantage over custom designs by AIBs, such as this card from PowerColor.
View at TechPowerUp Main Site
Interestingly, while the HD 6970 Devil 13 itself, like the Radeon HD 7970 AMD reference board, used expensive International Rectifier DirectFETs in typical configuration, the HD 7970 Votex uses cost-effective driver-MOSFET (DrMOS) chips that appear to be made by Renesas. Cost effective doesn't necessarily mean "cheap", these chips, according to PowerColor, offer 93% efficiency with up to 1 MHz switching frequency. On the reverse side of the PCB, we can find the power stage to be complemented with SP capacitors that offer 40% lower ESR with and support higher switching frequencies.
This doesn't change our matter-of-fact observation from the older article that PowerColor used cost-effective components (compared to the CPL-made chokes and International Rectifier DirectFETs featured on AMD reference PCB), but that doesn't necessarily make it lower quality. AMD has a knack of going overkill with component quality on its reference boards that offer little real-world advantage over custom designs by AIBs, such as this card from PowerColor.
View at TechPowerUp Main Site
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