The Bottom Line
Overall, the Radeon HD 4850 was frankly a pleasant surprise. After the disappointment of the Radeon HD 2900, which had an interesting architecture but reduced performance, AMD came out with an HD 3800 series which, while it didn’t give them a lead in the performance race with Nvidia, at least offered a good performance/price ratio. But with the RV770, AMD is back in the game. Having corrected certain weak points (such as texture units and AA performance) and improved its strong points (arithmetic calculation and geometry shading), AMD has a very interesting alternative to the new Nvidia monster. AMD’s approach of avoiding a battle at the very high end, even if it is surely motivated by external factors, has borne fruit. It’s a big change from the R600, whose merits you could really tell were mostly marketing strategy improvised after the fact and required by the GPU’s performance. This time you get the feeling that the strategy has been carefully studied, down to the actual technical choices made.
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Bottom line as i see it, this is a Smashing card!
Prices on the UK market put a HD4850 at £120 (ebuyer.com) where as the GTX260 is £300! considering the overal performance difference between the two, i'd get 2 HD4850's in Crossfire mode and still be cheaper than a GTX260.
Once again AMD/ATI have produced a card that isnt amazing on performance, but bang for your buck its probably the best card on the market at those prices
The very fact that, yet again, we have a whole page dedicated to noise is a sure sign that these manufacturers still don't have all of the priorities covered. How many years ago was it that THG posted that funny video showing an Nvidia card as a leaf blower & barbecue? - and still we have to put up with substandard cooling solutions. I haven't bought a graphics card for years now without getting an aftermarket heatsink to go with it - thank god for companies like Zalman & Thermalright who are sparing our ears!!
I have seen on the reg that the 4870 more than doubles the performance of a 3870. If this is true and they hit a ~$300 price tag than AMD/ATI are back baby.
Apparently they use 160W at load but beat the 3870 on performance/W by a long way.
Can't wait to see it. Even though I know that this site rakes in more from intel/nvidia.
http://www.pcper.com/images/review [...] 48-bar.jpg
Dual 4870s can take on a 280 no sweat and push for serious performance, and they're supposedly near similar price. By itself the 4870 takes on the $100USD more; 260. I smell price drops.
Thanks to Tom’s Hardware for including the FSX test in these results. It’s interesting to see how differently the cards line up with FSX. No other game produces similar results or shows up the new technology in a different light. To any serious simmer it is the AA/AF performance on big screens that is crucial and this shows the biggest differences and biggest insights. Also it was good to see that my card (an overclocked 8800 GTX) is still top of the pile!
lets just hope that this brings in enough profits to help the CPU market, because if you look at the info on the intel nahalem, it looks as though they have alot more potential, but they dont want to release that potential just yet, where as, if AMD release a competitor then we might just see the nahalems full potential!!