Ah, so they call it a larger number rather then "x2"...
But where are the x2 cards that cost less than 700$
the equivalent of the 4850 x2 in the 5xxx series?
Ah, so they call it a larger number rather then "x2"...
But where are the x2 cards that cost less than 700$
the equivalent of the 4850 x2 in the 5xxx series?
5870 is more than fast enough for a Q9400. 5970 will be bottlenecked unless you have a 2560x1600 monitor. Also there is a Diamond 5970 for $600 at www.ncixus.com so not all 5970s are $700.
Without the 480 out and about I'm sure AIB's would rather sell someone two $450 dollar 5870's than one $700 5970.
Why take two chips and sell them for less combined than you could separately for a higher total price? Just no reason to right now, and I'm sure they're lining their wallets something fierce.
Also power delivery if you're going for an extreme overclock, but it shouldn't bother most users.I agree, HD5970 seems like a good deal in comparison to two HD5870s.
This advantage gets even better if the person wants to watercool. (One 5970 full cover block is cheaper than two 5870 blocks).
I think the only disadvantage to buying 5970 relates to physical size (length of the video card).
Also power delivery if you're going for an extreme overclock, but it shouldn't bother most users.
The 5970 is the equivalent of two 5850s. It's just expensive. There are a few manufacturer-specific cards out, such as the Asus RoG Ares, that have performance closer to that of two 5870s.
Ah, so they call it a larger number rather then "x2"...
But where are the x2 cards that cost less than 700$
the equivalent of the 4850 x2 in the 5xxx series?
