Download the Tom's Hardware App from the App Store
The reference for current tech news
Yes No

Power, Noise, And Heat

by

Given the 5870’s 188W board power (and even the Radeon HD 5850’s 151W rating), ATI had to pay particular attention to power consumption with this product. Voltages, clock rates, and on-board components were all taken into consideration.  

To begin, there are the 5850-class frequencies, which facilitate lower voltages, and thus, lower board power (294W). The same power-saving technologies that allow other 5000-series cards to drop to remarkably-low idle consumption also apply here. Multi-level clock gating, voltage scaling, and engine/memory clock scaling all work effectively. In fact, we observed the same 157/300 MHz idle clocks seen on other cards from this same generation.

The Radeon HD 5970 adds a board-level feature that applies an ACPI S1 sleep state to the secondary GPU, effectively halving its idle power consumption, according to ATI. As a result, the Radeon HD 5970 is rated for a 42W idle board power—less than half that of a single-GPU Radeon HD 4870 (90W)!

In theory, then, there should be 15W separating a Radeon HD 5870 and 5970 at idle. Our measurements were a little higher at 27W between the two. Moreover, the Radeon HD 5970 actually seemed to use just a little more idle power than a pair of Radeon HD 5870s in CrossFire, suggesting the second GPU might not be dropping into S1 with our beta drivers.

So too is the 5970’s load consumption slightly higher than a pair of Radeon HD 5850s in CrossFire—though not far off the mark. Out of curiosity, we bumped up the voltages on our Radeon HD 5970 and pushed the clock rates to 5870 speeds (850/1,200 MHz). Seemingly not a fan of our FurMark test, the board quickly spiked to 99 degrees Celsius and then froze.

A single Radeon HD 5970 is slightly louder under load and slightly quieter at idle than two Radeon HD 5870s in CrossFire. The good news is that, on the Windows desktop, you’ll completely forget that there’s a foot-long dual-GPU monster under the hood. When it comes time to game, though, this card certainly makes its presence known.

Share:
30
Comments
Read more
X
Submit

Comments
Read the comments on the forums
adlertheman 18/11/2009 07:29
Hide
-1+

amd did it again! WOW,..aren't we all shocked! lets see something out of their cpu line now! Ati's a life saver!!!

tinnerdxp 18/11/2009 09:26
Show
omegon 18/11/2009 09:53
Hide
-1+

If they include triple GTX285s they will include 2 5970 aswell.

But the people who are gonna pay 1110$ for the gtx's or 1200$ for the dual 5970 really dont need the benchmarks, for them its a presitige to have this, so including them in this article is kinda useless.

staalkoppie 18/11/2009 12:33
Hide
-0+

All Hail ATi!!! :) What a huge piece of tech!

mi1ez 18/11/2009 12:50
Hide
-2+

Anyone else see the potential for a 5990 with GPUs shipped at 5870 speeds?

mi1ez 18/11/2009 12:52
Hide
-2+

it even has solder points to make the 6pin into an 8pin PCIe power connector!

Dandalf 18/11/2009 14:50
Hide
--2+

Can someone please explain to me why these graphics cards are referred to as 'discrete'? They're like the absolute least discrete components in my machine. Now that I mention it, why are they still called graphics cards and not graphics bricks??

Dandalf 18/11/2009 15:08
Hide
-3+

And another question... are AMD aware that this card is bottlenecked by their fastest CPU? That means they are pretty much forcing customers who buy this to Intel .... what were they thinking??

AMD better put their foot down on those 6-core chips.

Marney_5 18/11/2009 16:11
Hide
-0+

Awesome! cant wait to get my hands on one!

david__t 18/11/2009 17:09
Hide
-0+

And still Crysis cannot be played at full detail with Aliasing / Filtering on as well @ 1080p...

barney stinsen 18/11/2009 18:47
Hide
-0+

You know what is the best thing about this card? OMFG!!! 640 euros!! Now that, my friends, is the best feature AMD could have implemented!!!

P.S :640 Euros = 957.95200 U.S. dollars. But wait, this card is 660 U.S. dollars = 440.940673 Euros.


obsidian86 18/11/2009 19:20
Hide
-0+

Dandalf :
Can someone please explain to me why these graphics cards are referred to as 'discrete'? They're like the absolute least discrete components in my machine. Now that I mention it, why are they still called graphics cards and not graphics bricks??


graphics mountains more like it

jimb06789 18/11/2009 21:11
Hide
-0+

@Dandalf:

You seem to be confusing "discrete" with "discreet".

5970 is £574 at Novatech, I'm tempted but I'll wait for Nvidia's release.

jimishtar 18/11/2009 22:07
Hide
-0+

i wish i could buy it.

redkachina 18/11/2009 22:31
Hide
-0+

This beast make my GTX275 looks like little toy..*sigh* even a tri sli cant even be compared with it..time to break my piggy bank LoL

Dandalf 19/11/2009 03:16
Hide
-0+

Woop jimb you are right! My second point stands though :D

SpidersWeb 19/11/2009 04:37
Hide
-0+

From dictionary.com

Quote :dis·crete (d-skrt) adj.
1. Constituting a separate thing


Quote :dis·creet (d-skrt)
adj.
1. Marked by, exercising, or showing prudence and wise self-restraint in speech and behavior; circumspect.
2. Free from ostentation or pretension; modest.

SpidersWeb 19/11/2009 04:39
Hide
-0+

Oh and the 5970 seems amazing. Out of my budget though, but then I'm happy with my 4850 which is considered weak sauce compared to these!

Anonymous 19/11/2009 08:10
Hide
-1+

strictly for idiots.

vernoncougar 19/11/2009 09:41
Hide
-0+

I've got 2 HD5870's
better than HD5970 right?


Best offers

Newsletters


OK