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Amd hd 6670
Though the AMD HD 6670 is a card that might get sneered at by hard-core gamers and crunchers as giving not enough performance -and by HTPC builders as giving just too much of it,
it is actually THE card to have for crunching on the FM1 and FM2 platforms, preferably in the company of a full-sized ATX board (which at the outbringing of both the FM1 and FM2
boards gave headaches to the HTPC builders (it's too big!) and hard-core gamers (it does not deliver enough performance!): who has need for ATX-sized A75 or A85 mobo's? We do!)
Together with a 65 Watt APU you can build a system that hardly eats power as compared to a solution using a Phenom II or FX chip and a card/cards comparable to the combined power of the APU and HD 6670(s), and compared to the solutions offered by Intel for the same price you are bound to have found yourself a real winner in the Fusion combo, especially crunching-wise.
But which HD 6670 is good for you? There is roughly four choices: DDR3 or DDR5 and Active vs Passive cooling (and any combination of those)
The only difference in the DDR3 models seems to be the speed at which the DDR3 memory is clocked, the GPUs are all at 800 Mhz (though I've had a MSI HD 6670 that was clocked significantly lower, at 666 Mhz and with suffering performance as compared to my ASUS model).
If I compare the models I can buy here in the Netherlands, ASUS seems to offer the best models in DDR3 format, both in active and passive version, as their DDR3 memory is clocked at 2x 900 = 1800 Mhz.
P_500 (1).jpgP_500.jpg
They also have a 2 GB model with active cooling, which might be useful when you crunch more than one WU at the same time on your video card.
In the DDR5 field all memory seems to have been clocked at 4x 1000 = 4000 Mhz, giving more bandwidth (64 vs 28.8 Gb/s) at the expense of a slightly higher energy thirst.
The difference here is the GPU clock, which runs highest with the ASUS EAH6670/DI/1GD5, 850 Mhz
P_500 (2).jpg.
Mind you: the almost similairly named ASUS EAH6670/DIS/1GD5 runs at 810 Mhz and has other video outputs (and does not need an extra 6-pin PCIe power connector as well).
Sapphire has here the best (the only?) DDR5 model with passive cooling: the Ultimate HD 6670 1GB GDDR5.
Last edited by Dirk Broer; 06-21-2013 at 07:26 PM.
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Nice Hardware, I like it!
Challenge me, or correct me, but don't ask me to die quietly.
…Pursuit is always hard, capturing is really not the focus, it’s the hunt ...
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I don't believe in Passive cooling of GPUs anymore since I picked up a cheap GPU one time, and when I pumped it up running Furmark in less than a minute it crashed the video drivers and/or started giving blue screens.
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I just put an Asus 6670 in last night and it seems to do OK on my son's game. It was this one; ASUS EAH6670/DIS/1GD5 Radeon HD 6670 Video Card - 1GB, GDDR5, PCI-Express 2.1 (x16), DVI, HDMI, DisplayPort, DirectX 11, Single-Slot, Eyefinity, CrossFireX Ready It's getting to the point that passive to me means it doesn't need it own power cord. lol
Last edited by Terry1953; 02-06-2013 at 02:58 PM.
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You have to put it under a stress test to really see how good that passive cooling really is. I use Furmark for all video cards, just have them run for a while and see how high the temperatures reaches under full load and if any image artifacts start showing up or other issues happen when overheating.
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The one I have is NOT passive, anything but, it sounds like a jet taking off about half the time. I have it running Moo tasks so it's been under a load for about 24 hours and it seems to be doing well and not getting to warm. The 8350 is another story I'm still trying to get a combination to keep the temps down on it.
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I have a couple 6570's. It is also a good card. Puts out around 10,000 a day on rc5, doesn't need an extra PCI-E power plug, and puts out zilch in heat. Runs nice and quiet even though it has a small fan attached. Not a speedball on collatz, but then ya can't have it all. :-)
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but new 7XXX series are outperformed and comes with same price
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AMD have just recently released a newer card (HD 7xxx series or higher) in the class of the HD 6570, the HD 7730 (class being GPUs that have a tdp of 50Watt or lower)
Brucifer couldn't yet have bought one of those when he wrote that, and it remains to be seen whether a HD 7730 can outperform a HD 6570 on BOINC.
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Well the beauty of the little 6570 is that it doesn't put out squat for heat, doesn't need a power plug, doesn't weird out rather just sits there and bangs away nice and quietly. For a dependable little gpu that you can fire off and leave alone unattended it is a hard to beat little buggers. And yup, when I got those, the 7xxx stuff wasn't out. :-)
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