People, remember that 360/370/380 are OEM chips. Keep your eyes open for 370X, 380X and 390/390X.
Here are the latest price ive heard from Korea (rumor per moderators request):
R9 370X - $229
R9 380X - $349
R9 390 - $429
R9 390X 4GB - $549
R9 390X 8GB -$599
You may notice that R9 380X cost $100 more than R9 290X.
Lets just say GTX 980 will get some serious competition.
Its a reason why AMD only announced and listed the non-X chips. Announcements should come eventually![]()
I see there is an 390x water cooled version, is there going to be an air cooled version as well without the use of water cooling?
Translation please?![]()
He was referring to G1/4 fittings, a standard connector in open-loop water cooling components.
So it might be sold with a dedicated CLC/AIO setup, but might be compatible with open-loop systems for people who want to throw the card into their current loop.
I am curious how this compatibility would be achieved, considering it is most likely that the pump is integrated in the card, all CLC/AIO coolers are made that way. It would be weird and mess with the dimensions if the pump was added to the radiator assembly, though not at all impossible, just highly unlikely IMHO.
Would having essentially a second pump in your open-loop system actually create any issues? If you have a full system and add in this card, could the integrated pump continue to run and not degrade cooling performance for the rest of the system? I don't know how the different water pressures would behave in such a setup.
I can't see $599 for an 8GB WCE R9 390X. That seems way too low. I think that pricing list may be setting people up for disappointment. Let's all try to keep in mind that everything, including those pics, are unconfirmed and potentially incorrect.
He was referring to G1/4 fittings, a standard connector in open-loop water cooling components.
So it might be sold with a dedicated CLC/AIO setup, but might be compatible with open-loop systems for people who want to throw the card into their current loop.
I am curious how this compatibility would be achieved, considering it is most likely that the pump is integrated in the card, all CLC/AIO coolers are made that way. It would be weird and mess with the dimensions if the pump was added to the radiator assembly, though not at all impossible, just highly unlikely IMHO.
Would having essentially a second pump in your open-loop system actually create any issues? If you have a full system and add in this card, could the integrated pump continue to run and not degrade cooling performance for the rest of the system? I don't know how the different water pressures would behave in such a setup.
There is Antec KÜHLER H2O 650 - all in one CPU liquid cooler with a separate pump attached to the rad/fan.
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It doesn't have threaded connectors thou... But pump is not always integrated into a block.
when it is too good to be true, it isThat price list is made up. Ignore it.
I can't see $599 for an 8GB WCE R9 390X. That seems way too low. I think that pricing list may be setting people up for disappointment. Let's all try to keep in mind that everything, including those pics, are unconfirmed and potentially incorrect.
With such slow node progression and ever-demanding applications like HPC and VR, discrete isn't going away for a very long time. I wouldn't call the strategy short term.....
Hopefully AMD can end the practice with their upcoming parts.
There is a 3GB 3200SP card out there, apparently.
SiSoftware Official Live Ranker Details for Result ID AMD Radeon R9 200 Series (3200SP 40C 947MHz, 3GB) (OpenCL)
some are speculating that this is the often rumored "full fat Hawaii" chip.
He was referring to G1/4 fittings, a standard connector in open-loop water cooling components.
So it might be sold with a dedicated CLC/AIO setup, but might be compatible with open-loop systems for people who want to throw the card into their current loop.
I am curious how this compatibility would be achieved, considering it is most likely that the pump is integrated in the card, all CLC/AIO coolers are made that way. It would be weird and mess with the dimensions if the pump was added to the radiator assembly, though not at all impossible, just highly unlikely IMHO.
Would having essentially a second pump in your open-loop system actually create any issues? If you have a full system and add in this card, could the integrated pump continue to run and not degrade cooling performance for the rest of the system? I don't know how the different water pressures would behave in such a setup.
He didnt say but I think it is US priceCloudfire: Are those US prices? Or what people in Korea will pay? I would totally get the 8gb day 1 if that was true!
No but I post the information I find. It makes these threads more interesting and I think the public should see the leaks too. As for all speculation, take everything with salt of course. But the leaker seems trustworthy. We will see.Cut it out. Do you really care this much about getting attention?
Again, it may not be the WCE. It could be a cheaper air cooled 8GB model. The guy didnt specify WCE or anything. Just amount of HBMI can't see $599 for an 8GB WCE R9 390X. That seems way too low. I think that pricing list may be setting people up for disappointment. Let's all try to keep in mind that everything, including those pics, are unconfirmed and potentially incorrect.
My thoughts regarding AMD`s upcoming cards:
R9 370X: $229
What card do we have that cost $229? R9 285.
Would less cores make sense, ie worse value? If no, what if 370X is 1792 cores + HBM?
Say HBM bring +10% in performance over GDDR5. 45 * 1.10 = 50%. Now you are at R9 280X performance. Say 370X is higher clocked than R9 285, 918MHz >>> ~980MHz. Thats another 10%. 50 * 1.10 = 55%.
Suddenly GTX 780 performance that was rumored isn`t a stretch after all...
https://tpucdn.com/reviews/NVIDIA/GeForce_GTX_Titan_X/images/perfrel_2560.gif
R9 380X: $349
We know some cards will be Hawaii blend. R9 270 isnt, R9 280 isnt either.
380X will cost $100 more than R9 290X. Would a downgrade make sense? Hell no.
What if R9 380X is 2816 cores + HBM? Add +7% from GCN 1.0 which 290X is to GCN 1.3, then +10% from HBM.
Where are you at then? 70% * 1.07 = 75%. 75% x 1.10 = 83%.
Thats 10% faster than GTX 980...
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He didnt say but I think it is US price
What shouldn`t I believe?Do you even believe what you post anymore?
- Earlier drivers listed only R9 360 and R9 370. No X-cards.AMD released its specs for the OEM models of the Radeon R9 380, Radeon R9 370 and Radeon R9 360. These all are based on existing chips and designs. I specifically will add the keyword OEM here as the actual retail products might differ in specs a little
