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AMD Radeon HD 7870 - Game-Breaking Power

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AMD used to reserve the X800-series part of its nomenclature for its most powerful single-core cards, but these days the Radeon HD 7870 is an impressive mid-range part. It’s the most expensive model in this test, at $301 inc VAT, and it’s got its work cut out to eclipse Nvidia’s GeForce GTX 660.

AMD Radeon HD 7870

AMD Radeon HD 7870

The Pitcairn XT core, used to build the HD 7870, is made from an all-new architecture that’s called Southern Islands, which is created with a 28nm manufacturing process – the same as Nvidia uses on its Kepler-based cards. The Pitcairn core is one step down from high-end Tahiti-based cards, and it shows in the transistor count: while the Radeon HD 7970 use 4.3 billion of them, AMD includes 'just' 2.8 billion in this core.

That’s not to say Pitcairn is lacking, it benefits from a 1,000MHz stock speed, which is among the best here, and it also includes 2GB of RAM. That's twice as much as you’ll find on low-end cards, and the GDDR5 memory is managed by a 256-bit bus, wider than any of the three Nvidia cards on test, and it’s clocked at a respectable 1,200MHz.

AMD has crammed 1,280 stream processors into this card, and they’re packaged into twenty of AMD’s Graphics Core Next clusters, a dozen less than is found on AMD’s top-end cards. That means each cluster has 80 stream processors each. This card has also had a recent upgrade, too, with a new 'Never Settle' driver - version 12.11 of AMD's Catalyst driver - which it claims will give all of its Southern Islands cards a performance boost of up to 15%. That’s a big leap, bought about by two major improvements: increased efficiency in the usage of cores across the card, and enhanced memory cache performance.

Nvidia, meanwhile, has responded to AMD’s Never Settle program with drivers that it claims will also boost the performance of GeForce cards by a healthy margin.

The HD 7870 may well be the most expensive AMD card in this test, but it proved its worth in our benchmarks – especially thanks to Catalyst 12.11’s upgrades. It clocked up 60fps in the 1,920 x 1,080 Crysis benchmark, which is three frames more than Nvidia’s GTX 660 could manage, and the AMD card averaged 50fps in the sequel – one frame faster than Nvidia.

The AMD card pipped Nvidia in our other two games tests, too: its 71fps average in Just Cause 2 and 92fps average in DiRT 3, both run at Very High settings, are one frame and three frames ahead of anything Nvidia could manage.

The HD 7870 may well be the most expensive AMD card in this test, but it proved its worth in our benchmarks – especially thanks to Catalyst 12.11’s upgrades

The HD 7870 may well be the most expensive AMD card in this test, but it proved its worth in our benchmarks – especially thanks to Catalyst 12.11’s upgrades

Our theoretical tests back up the HD 7870’s real-world dominance; it averaged 83.1fps in Unigine Heaven’s DX11 test, almost four frames more than the Nvidia card’s 79.4fps, and in 3Dmark 11 the AMD’s combined benchmark score of 7,575 easily outpaced Nvidia’s 5,499. That's an advantage that was also found in the performance and graphics portions of the 3Dmark 11 test.

There’s one area where AMD fell behind, though, and that’s power consumption. With the HD 7870 installed our test rig drew 77W from the mains, with this figure rising to 246W when stress-tested. It’s the highest power figure this week, with the GTX 660 requiring just 224W, and it shows in the physical build of the HD 7870: it’s the only card here that requires two, rather than one, six-pin power plugs.

It’s a small price to pay, though, for graphics dominance. There’s only around ten pounds between the AMD Radeon HD 7870 and Nvidia’s GeForce GTX 660 at the checkout, with AMD’s driver updates having at least equalled to Nvidia’s own software improvements.

Yes, it's the most expensive card here, but it's also dominant in our benchmarks. If you’re searching for game-breaking power for less than $320, look no further than the HD 7870. If you’re looking for the best graphics possible on a budget, this is the one to buy.

Details

·         Price: $301

·         Website: www.amd.com

Verdict

·         Quality: 9/10

·         Value: 8/10

 

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