ATI Radeon HD 5670

ATI Radeon HD 5670

3 expert reviews - 0 user reviews

4.0/10
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We have collected 3 reviews of the ATI Radeon HD 5670. Experts rate ATI Radeon HD 5670 4/10. Reviewsor.com helps you find reviews, best prices, user reviews of the ATI Radeon HD 5670 and ATI Graphics cards.

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ATI Radeon HD 5670 Reviews

DigitalVersus

02/2010

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4.0/10

Product Survey: Graphics Cards

With the Radeon HD 5670, ATI is attacking the occasional player segment, those looking to set themselves up at under the £80 mark. It has DirectX 11 compatibility, but how does the card do in gaming? Is it powerful enough to run the latest 3D titles or not? At 16.8 cm long and weighing in at 230 grammes, the 5670 is a featherweight model. The cooling system is very flat and the card only takes up one PCI slot. However this cooler has two disadvantages. Firstly, hot air is not funnelled out of the casing but remains inside. Secondly the fan is not one of the quietest. We took a reading of 43.1 dB(A) in idle, which translates to a constant sound that, though not noisy enough to be annoying, is present. In load, it becomes more insistent and tends to become more shrill (51.4 dB(A)). We've seen louder but we've seen quieter too. In terms of heat, the card's pretty standard for the Radeon HD 5000 range: 42°C at idle and 84°C when in intense 3D load. First of all, note that the card doesn't require the use of a PCI-Express power cable. The 75 W from the PCI-Express connector are enough. You can see why the card consumes so little.

TechReport

01/2010

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AMD's Radeon HD 5670 graphics card

With its DirectX 11 graphics cards now populating the middle and upper echelons of the market—and last year's supply issues largely behind it—AMD is now proceeding into the low-end arena. Today, we're getting to see the first product of that expansion: the Radeon HD 5670, which should start cropping up in e-tail stocks soon for about $99. To keep the price tag in the double digits, AMD has taken the world's smallest scalpel and carefully sliced away some of the pixel-crunching resources from the bigger and more powerful GPUs in Radeon HD 5700, 5800, and 5900-series cards. That means the newcomer follows a similar recipe to the rest of its brethren, delivering DirectX 11 support and multi-display capabilities in a freshly minted 40-nm chip. You're just getting it in a smaller, fun-sized portion. Is fun-sized still tasty, or has AMD removed too much of the icing compared to other DX11 Radeons? That's what we're about to find out. AMD has nicknamed the Radeon HD 5670's GPU "Redwood," keeping with the coniferous naming scheme of its DirectX 11 Evergreen family. Under the hood (or bark, rather), Redwood contains half the execution resources of Juniper, the GPU in Radeon HD 5700-series cards, with the same 128-bit memory interface.

HotHardware

01/2010

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ATI Radeon HD 5670: DX11 For Under $100

AMD continues their barrage of DirectX-11 class GPU releases with the affordably priced ATI Radeon HD 5670. If you remember all the way back to September of last year, AMD had committed--or at the very least planned--to release multiple new GPUs, at various price points up and down the spectrum. First came the Radeon HD 5800 series, quickly followed by the 5700 series, and then came the ultra-powerful Radeon HD 5970, all in the span of about two months. Here are we are now, a little less than two months removed from the Radeon HD 5970 launch, and AMD is ready with yet another new card, this time targeted at the sub-$100 price segment. As its name suggests, the ATI Radeon HD 5670 shares a number of features with its higher-end counterparts in the Radeon HD 5000 series, like Eyefinity and full DX11 support. Come along for the ride as we show you the new Radeon HD 5670, discuss its specifications, and ultimately take it for a spin through a number of benchmarks... AMD's release schedule of DirectX 11 capable GPUs is outlined on the slide above--we'll be showing you "Redwood" here today with some quick glimpses of "Cedar" as well.