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Unannounced Radeon HD 5830 price and specs revealed
Although there has been no official announcement, the upcoming Radeon HD 5830 is all but confirmed by now thanks to numerous leaks, the latest of which brings full specifications as well as a price tag. According to a European online retail listing cited by Fudzilla, the card should cost around 215€, or about 17% less than the average HD 5850 card on the other side of the Atlantic. This means that, if accurate, and the same price relationship is retained for the U.S. market, the upcoming card could sell for around $250.
Of course, this is nothing more than a simple conjecture, but the listing also offered some hard numbers that should give us a good idea of what to expect. The still-unannounced 5830 reportedly packs the same Cypress LE core used in Radeon HD 5850 cards, but with 1280 stream processors instead of 1440, and will be able to crank out 60 texels per clock rather than 72 on the 5850.
The memory configuration will remain the same, 1GB of GDDR5 memory operating at 1000MHz, but apparently the core clock has been upped from 725MHz on the 5850 to 750MHz. Physically the two cards will be very similar, possibly using the same PCB and cooler, and like all the Radeon HD 5000-series cards it will have Eyefinity support. The site offered no word on when we can expect these units to start shipping, but last we heard the Radeon HD 5830 was scheduled to debut next week, on February 18.
User Comments (4)
Post a comment|
teklord
on February 12, 2010 4:38 PM |
I want nVidia to release their GPU's so the 5870's, 5970's, 5850's will come down in price. You know, the cards we actually want, not these stopgap cards they keep releasing. |
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Guest
on February 12, 2010 9:57 PM |
Just cave and by an ATI card, Mr. Fanboy. |
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Archean
on February 13, 2010 1:13 AM |
I think good competition is essential for buying the right product at the right price; and right now it is not the case. |
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Guest
on February 16, 2010 2:32 PM |
Agreed. The 4830 of the last generation was total crap. It filled in somewhat of a gap, but faced stability and huge image quality issues. Didn't overclock well either. The 9800 GT was still cheaper and still a better deal. You know you'll regret buying the fillgap, especially when you see the real deal like the 5850 or 5870 2GB under $200 in 6 months. |
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