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PowerColor Uploads Lots of Radeon RX 9070 XT Red Devil Promo Images

T0@st

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PowerColor has updated its website with a Radeon RX 9070 XT Red Devil product page—this is the first example of an RX 9000 series model being officially listed alongside their existing selection of (exclusively) AMD GPU-based graphics cards. The Taiwanese brand has not published any technical specifications—Team Red RDNA 4 NDAs are likely still in effect—but a pleasing number of Radeon RX 9070 XT Red Devil promotional images have been uploaded. A limited edition package (with alleged bundled extras) seems to be in the pipeline—VideoCardz has provided visual evidence of a fancy container (see below).

Teaser images appeared online at the start of this year—close-ups of glowing signature red parts were accompanied by an ominous message: "every edge shines like a gem. Every second burns like fire. If power was in your hands, how would you use it?" Days later, TechPowerUp inspected a fully unveiled Red Devil demonstration sample at CES 2025—new Hellhound and Reaper designs were also within reach. PowerColor's freshly uploaded images reveal one major difference—VideoCardz adeptly points out the presence of two 8-pin power connectors on the promos, while the CES example possessed three physical inputs. They theorize that renders of PowerColor's Radeon RX 9070 (non-XT) Red Devil model have appeared on the XT's product page. Beyond discrepancies in connector counts, the overall design matches that of the Las Vegas showcase model.



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Blowthrough is the way to go for air cooling. Lower temps and less noise. Just wish we didn't need anti sag brackets or vertical mounting.

Nope. The hot air from the card is thrown directly onto the neighbouring components - overheating M.2 SSDs, CPUs, RAM modules, and overall increasing the in-case temperatures.

Reference cards from AMD/Nvidia use blower type cooling solution. in that case there is a single fan in the gpu that pushes the hot air outside of the case. The air comes out of the vents from the back(where you have the DVI/HDMI slots)
Now many companies use their own type of coolers to cool the card. In those cases the fans blow air directly to the graphics card's heatsink and the hot air comes out from the sides and vents of the Graphics card. The hot air eventually ends up inside the case. So you will need your case to be well ventilated.

Watch this video and you will have all your doubts cleared:



 
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Nope. The hot air from the card is thrown directly onto the neighbouring components - overheating M.2 SSDs, CPUs, RAM modules, and overall increasing the in-case temperatures.

Reference cards from AMD/Nvidia use blower type cooling solution. in that case there is a single fan in the gpu that pushes the hot air outside of the case. The air comes out of the vents from the back(where you have the DVI/HDMI slots)
Now many companies use their own type of coolers to cool the card. In those cases the fans blow air directly to the graphics card's heatsink and the hot air comes out from the sides and vents of the Graphics card. The hot air eventually ends up inside the case. So you will need your case to be well ventilated.

Watch this video and you will have all your doubts cleared:




Nvidia Founders Edition coolers are blowthrough as far as I know. In my experience heat hitting other components is worse without blowthrough, especially when the fins are perpendicular to the motherboard (more heat is dumped right onto the nvme drives).

These coolers are really good at cooling the GPU quietly. I have yet to see a single blower style cooler that doesn't sound like a jet about to take off. The heat getting dumped outside the case is nice but at what cost. More noise and higher gpu temps. Would be great if we could have our cake and eat it.
 
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I'll never own another blower style GPU as long as I can help it. My last was a Nvida Zotac 580 in SLI. Yeahhhhh, I won't be doing that again - NOISE!
 
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I have yet to see a single blower style cooler that doesn't sound like a jet about to take off.

I'll never own another blower style GPU as long as I can help it.

The problem with the legacy blower cards was that the attached heatsinks were too small. Today, you get 5-slot monster heatsinks, so problem is solved. The turbine will run at lower speeds.

Too small heatsink:

1737057019338.png
 
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Nope. The hot air from the card is thrown directly onto the neighbouring components - overheating M.2 SSDs, CPUs, RAM modules, and overall increasing the in-case temperatures.

Reference cards from AMD/Nvidia use blower type cooling solution. in that case there is a single fan in the gpu that pushes the hot air outside of the case. The air comes out of the vents from the back(where you have the DVI/HDMI slots)
Now many companies use their own type of coolers to cool the card. In those cases the fans blow air directly to the graphics card's heatsink and the hot air comes out from the sides and vents of the Graphics card. The hot air eventually ends up inside the case. So you will need your case to be well ventilated.

Watch this video and you will have all your doubts cleared:



This is hilariously incorrect.

Both AMD and Nvidia have stopped using blower designs. Nvidia stopped with the 2000 series, AMD with the RX 6000s. Open frame coolers, like AIBs have used for over a decade now, allow far larger heatsinks and larger fans, which are substantially quieter. They also run cooler, consistently, in GPU testing, ESPECIALLY with big cards.

A modern "blow through" design, in case you havent noticed by the name, allows air to be blown through the back of the card, and results in the best possible temperatures. Any case today, even cheapo cases, have sufficient ventilation to allow this type of card to work.
 
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That's a big chungus. I'll wait for the Hellhound and Reaper.
 
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Both AMD and Nvidia have stopped using blower designs.

Blower is the best . Period .


1737061000811.png


1737060865775.png
 
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This is hilariously incorrect.

Both AMD and Nvidia have stopped using blower designs. Nvidia stopped with the 2000 series, AMD with the RX 6000s. Open frame coolers, like AIBs have used for over a decade now, allow far larger heatsinks and larger fans, which are substantially quieter. They also run cooler, consistently, in GPU testing, ESPECIALLY with big cards.

A modern "blow through" design, in case you havent noticed by the name, allows air to be blown through the back of the card, and results in the best possible temperatures. Any case today, even cheapo cases, have sufficient ventilation to allow this type of card to work.
While you're right, @3valatzy isn't wrong about the benefits to the rest of the system's thermals. I upgraded from an open air 290X to a reference Vega 64, i.e. a blower, and despite the Vega chugging down as much or even more power than its predecessor, all of the other components in my system were cooler.
 
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Blower is the best . Period .


View attachment 380285

View attachment 380284
Nbc

While you're right, @3valatzy isn't wrong about the benefits to the rest of the system's thermals. I upgraded from an open air 290X to a reference Vega 64, i.e. a blower, and despite the Vega chugging down as much or even more power than its predecessor, all of the other components in my system were cooler.
I never had a temp issue with my setup and its not a blower
 
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Nope. The hot air from the card is thrown directly onto the neighbouring components - overheating M.2 SSDs, CPUs, RAM modules, and overall increasing the in-case temperatures.

Reference cards from AMD/Nvidia use blower type cooling solution. in that case there is a single fan in the gpu that pushes the hot air outside of the case. The air comes out of the vents from the back(where you have the DVI/HDMI slots)
Now many companies use their own type of coolers to cool the card. In those cases the fans blow air directly to the graphics card's heatsink and the hot air comes out from the sides and vents of the Graphics card. The hot air eventually ends up inside the case. So you will need your case to be well ventilated.

Watch this video and you will have all your doubts cleared:



Maybe it would be slightly better for case but for the GPU itself it is worse.
Blower type fins are longer and by the time air gets close to the end it’s hot enough and does not cool the last portion of the fins, or it’s doing much less cooling.
That’s why most current GPUs have perpendicular fins to the length of the card. To keep fins the shortest possible plus to take advantage of more air from 2-3 fans.
If the air flow is enough any SSD below, under or above the GPU is affected negligible because the air coming out of the GPU cooler does not get too hot.
I have an SSD buried under my 3.5 slot card with a simple board cooler on it and is a couple of degrees warmer that the SSD above the GPU. Both below 50C for the NAND cells.

Requirement is the good system air flow so no hot spots/areas are present.
 
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The problem with the legacy blower cards was that the attached heatsinks were too small. Today, you get 5-slot monster heatsinks, so problem is solved. The turbine will run at lower speeds.

Too small heatsink:

View attachment 380263
Clearly this is the hill you want to die on... got it.
 
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