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Review: Sapphire HD 2900XT graphics card

AMD takes aim at Nvidia's 8800 by releasing its first DirectX 10 graphics card

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Recommended by PCW
Price: £260
Manufacturer: Sapphire
Technical specifications



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Overall rating: Overall rating
Features: Features
Ease of use: Ease of use
Value for money: Value for money
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Verdict

Pros: HDMI; audio controller; good high resolution performance; good value for money
Cons: Odd driver behaviour; hot; very noisy; high power consumption
Overall: Slightly faster than the 8800GTS 640MB and costs about the same, but is marred by bizarre driver behaviour


Emil Larsen, Personal Computer World 15 May 2007

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This new Sapphire card is based on the Radeon HD 2900XT, which is AMD's first major graphics card launch since the company bought ATI last year.

It was initially set to launch at the same time as Nvidia's high-end Geforce 8800 series back in November 2006.

Since AMD recently announced the card would only compete with the 8800GTS and not Nvidia's fastest 8800GTX, it's something of a humiliating blow for AMD.

The Radeon HD 2900XT features a 700 million transistor graphics processing unit (GPU) built on an 80nm process with 512MB GDDR3 Ram. A higher clocked 2900XTX version with 1GB of DDR4 Ram will supposedly be made available to manufacturers, however, it costs a lot more to make and has almost identical performance to the 2900XT tested here.

The Radeon range now sports an HD badge since all the cards will have HDCP keys onboard and come with an HDMI dongle. This means they are perfect for hooking up to an HD TV for playback of Blu-ray or HD-DVD movies.

What's more, AMD has fitted each GPU with an integrated sound controller. Since the audio is routed across the PCI Express bus, the 5.1 surround sound can be neatly outputted through the HDMI dongle.

In practice, you still need a sound card (such as Creative's X-Fi range or an integrated sound chip) to handle the audio. Since the HDMI is only the 1.2 specification and not the most recent 1.3 version you don't get 7.1 surround sound support, Deep Colour, Dolby TrueHD or DTS-HD audio formats.

Some Nvidia cards also support HDMI with audio output, but they require an SPDIF connection direct from the sound card.

These new Radeon cards have a lot in common with ATI's Xenos chip used in the Xbox360. As with the Xenos, stream processors are used and are dynamically allocated to perform pixel, vertex and geometry shader operations as well as physics operations.

Another novel feature the Radeon HD packs is a hardware tessellation chip. This chip splits triangles into multiple triangles resulting in a greater level of perceived detail, without a significant performance hit; this is a feature to watch out for in the future, since games need to be optimised for it.

Sapphire's card is based on AMD's reference design. At 23.8cm it's slightly longer than the 8800GTS, but not quite as long as the 8800GTX. The core runs at 740MHz and there's 512MB DDR3 Ram running at 1650MHz.

See also:

Review: ECS N8800GTS-320MX graphics cardA DirectX 10 card that packs a real punch for the money  20 Apr 2007
Review: MSI NX8600GT-T2D256E-OC graphics cardAn overclocked DirectX 10 Nvidia Geforce 8600GT card for under £100  17 Apr 2007
Review: Asus M2N32-SLI Premium Vista Edition motherboardAn AM2 board packed with features  30 Apr 2007

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