HIS R9 270X IceQ X² Turbo Boost Clock 2GB GDDR5 Video Card Review

Videocards/VGA Reviews by stefan @ 2013-10-31

The new R9 270X implementation from HIS comes with a custom PCB, an award-winning cooling system which is very efficient while keeping the noise down and is also pre-overclocked. The card trades punches with the GTX 760 and succeeds to surpass it in some games which are heavily AMD optimized.

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Short Description of New Radeon Series

We will continue with our R9 series presentation by looking upon the R9 270X from HIS. While the AMD GPU comes with the Curacao code name, it is practically identical to the previously launched Pitcairn architecture, along with a few improvements while keeping the card in the same price range.

 

 

 

The stock Radeon HD 7870 was operating at 1GHz core frequency and the memory clock was running at 1200MHz. It had 1280 Stream Processors, 80 Texture Units, 32 ROPs and 2GB of GDDR5 on a 256-bit memory bus. With the R9 270X AMD has raised the GPU frequency to 1050MHz while the memory is clocked at 1400MHz. HIS went even further and overclocked the core to 1140MHz while keeping the memory frequency at the same speed.

 

The HIS R9 270X IceQ X2 Turbo Boost Clock card also comes equipped with a smaller version of the IceQ X2 cooling system which features a large heatsink sporting five 6mm wide heapipes that is cooled by two 86mm dual axial fans.

 

The PowerTune function is now available on the full range so the GPU clock gets modified depending on power draw, heat and performance factors. Eyefinity has been also updated to V2 DDM, with the ability of 5x1 landscape and custom multi-monitor resolutions. Also, with the new series we are permitted to use the Eyefinity feature without the need of a DisplayPort adapter.

 

 

If the card provides for example two DVI ports and one HDMI, we can use all three to set up Eyefinity.

 

At the latest presentation, AMD has also introduced the TrueAudio DSP, which is unfortunately not included with the 280X and 270X, but it is present in the 260X and also top of the line 290/290X.

 

Mantle is a new API introduced with the latest seriers, which gives the game developers direct access to the GPUs by using the Graphics Core Next architecture. AMD has recently clarified that Mantle creates for PC a development platform which is similar to the one for the consoles, which already offer low-level APIs, close-to-metal programming, easier development and more. By creating a more console-like developer environment, Mantle improves time to market, reduces development costs and allows more efficient rendering and ultimately improves performance for gamers.


DirectX 11.2, which is coming with Windows 8.1 is compatible with the new series.

 

 

The main attraction of the latest DirectX seems to be Tiled Resources, which exposes AMD’s partially-resident textures via DirectX and we are also dealing with hardware-managed virtual memory for GPU.

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