Firestorm007
Senior member
- Dec 9, 2010
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It's up to the consumer to arm his or herself with knowledge before making a purchase.
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I can just imagine another thread like this in an alternate universe. In that universe, AMD calls the 6670 with gddr5 mem the 6690 and the gddr3 memory as the 6670... the op makes a thread, "OMGWTFBBQ, AMD is rebadging their cards. The 6670 and 6690 are the exact same cards just with different memory. Stop it, you're confusing us. Bait and Switch!"
At least someone gets it, good for you.:thumbsup:This thread is pure fail.
It clearly says gddr3 memory. Since the dawn of time, card companies have come out with the same model cards coming in 2 memory sizes.... 256 mb/512mb....1gb/2gb. And they've also come out with different memory types.
I can just imagine another thread like this in an alternate universe. In that universe, AMD calls the 6670 with gddr5 mem the 6690 and the gddr3 memory as the 6670... the op makes a thread, "OMGWTFBBQ, AMD is rebadging their cards. The 6670 and 6690 are the exact same cards just with different memory. Stop it, you're confusing us. Bait and Switch!"
Haha!
No need for alternate universe my friend... just look at the threads about nvidia ripping people off with their "rebadging "identical" cards"
to be fair amd does it to, 5770->6770
I hate it though.
like I said it can be just a mistake on neweggs part OR the manufacturers. do you really think Diamond is using TWICE the buswidth and still charging the same amount as everyone else's 64 bit cards? and again have you EVER seen 32 bit memory controller mentioned in a review?
heck ACER used to list their cheap 1440x900 monitors as being true 8 bit. I contacted them and even their "engineer" said it was true 8 bit which was BS.
I was responding to the post I quoted. Now it seems I have to consider what was said in a thread years ago?![]()
and do you really believe everything you read? AGAIN I gave you an example of how Acer claimed their cheap low end 19inch monitors were true 8 bit when anybody with sense knows damn well they were not. I also gave you another example where ASUS and Newegg originally claimed the 4670 I bought was 256 bit. it took 2 weeks for them to change that but they finally did BECAUSE PEOPLE CAN MAKE MISTAKES.Are you really still arguing about this? You've seen several pieces of evidence from independent 3rd parties, but every time somebody gives you something you say "I'm still not convinced". WTF?? Why don't you just ask us to prove to you that God doesn't exist?
Are you really still arguing about this? You've seen several pieces of evidence from independent 3rd parties, but every time somebody gives you something you say "I'm still not convinced". WTF?? Why don't you just ask us to prove to you that God doesn't exist?
I got a response from Diamond.......
Your ticket details:
Subject: Diamond Customer Inquiry [ORIGINAL]
Ticket ID: xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Department: TECHNICAL SUPPORT
New Update:
Hello,
The HD 6450 has a 128 bit memory interface.
And I noticed this on Newegg for the ASUS 32 bit card.
quote:
"Cons: 32 bit memory bus cripples the card's capabilities and buggy drivers kill it. I had the same experience with 7MC as another reviewer. Replaced with a GT430 and am loving my HTPC again"
So it seems it was not a error theses cards have a 32,64,or 128 bit memory.
the thread title implies that xfx is doing this
[snip]
"Bilking the masses"...what does that even mean?!..
No, he said XFX did it to him.............
Most of us are saying thats its wrong for any company to send out a xxxx product for review and then switch it months later, make it much slower, and still brand it as xxxx.
The other people are saying because it has been done this way in the lower end market before, it some how makes it right.
I say thats bullsh!t.
No, he said XFX did it to him.............
Most of us are saying thats its wrong for any company to send out a xxxx product for review and then switch it months later, make it much slower, and still brand it as xxxx.
The other people are saying because it has been done this way in the lower end market before, it some how makes it right.
I say thats bullsh!t.
No, he said XFX did it to him.............
Most of us are saying thats its wrong for any company to send out a xxxx product for review and then switch it months later, make it much slower, and still brand it as xxxx.
No, he said XFX did it to him.............
Most of us are saying thats its wrong for any company to send out a xxxx product for review and then switch it months later, make it much slower, and still brand it as xxxx.
The other people are saying because it has been done this way in the lower end market before, it some how makes it right.
I say thats bullsh!t.
So now the average Joe consumer needs to check
Model #
1.benchmarks
2. core speed
3, how many core
4. the difference between AMD cores and Nvidia cores
5. amount of memory
6. type of memory
7. memory bit style
So the average joe reads an Anandtech review and says ok im gonna buy a xxxx model with 512mb of memory, and he gets some 32 bit ,ddr3, slow ass card, that he paid a whole 5$ less for.
At least someone may have more information than before. That's a service. And it gave you and posters here something to do.
:whiste:
and again its just a mistake. I already said they will have to track down where the original mistake in information started. they are not going to put a 6450 gpu on 128 bit board and give it to for the 64 bit price.I got a response from Diamond.......
Your ticket details:
Subject: Diamond Customer Inquiry [ORIGINAL]
Ticket ID: xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Department: TECHNICAL SUPPORT
New Update:
Hello,
The HD 6450 has a 128 bit memory interface.
And I noticed this on Newegg for the ASUS 32 bit card.
quote:
"Cons: 32 bit memory bus cripples the card's capabilities and buggy drivers kill it. I had the same experience with 7MC as another reviewer. Replaced with a GT430 and am loving my HTPC again"
So it seems it was not a error theses cards have a 32,64,or 128 bit memory.
No, he said XFX did it to him.............
Most of us are saying thats its wrong for any company to send out a xxxx product for review and then switch it months later, make it much slower, and still brand it as xxxx.
Having considered the "problem" or the issue at hand, and considered how hard it must be to pick the right type of card when the information is available in the first line of the product name/title,
I have no choice but to trow my lot in with the rest of the posters that criticize the thread starters lack of cognitive ability.
And for the love of God, FIX the thread title. Something in me dies each time i see "Bilking the masses"...what does that even mean?!..
No, he said XFX did it to him.............
Most of us are saying thats its wrong for any company to send out a xxxx product for review and then switch it months later, make it much slower, and still brand it as xxxx.
The other people are saying because it has been done this way in the lower end market before, it some how makes it right.
I say thats bullsh!t.
So now the average Joe consumer needs to check
Model #
1.benchmarks
2. core speed
3, how many core
4. the difference between AMD cores and Nvidia cores
5. amount of memory
6. type of memory
7. memory bit style
So the average joe reads an Anandtech review and says ok im gonna buy a xxxx model with 512mb of memory, and he gets some 32 bit ,ddr3, slow ass card, that he paid a whole 5$ less for.
So tell me, do I have a valid complaint against Sapphire for making and selling the non-reference VaporX 5870's I have? Reference cards have a blower cooler that exhausts the hot air out of the case. Reference cards run at different clocks. Reference cards can have their voltage manipulated via software, mine cannot.
He was going to purchase a clearly labeled non-reference part that uses slower memory. My cards have different specs/components than reference also. Do we really need this thread to notify people that card makers make non-reference cards..? Sometimes they are slower cheaper cards, sometimes they bump up the speed.
This thread is a joke.
Yes, the card was clearly labeled. "RADEON 6670".
What's that look like? Click link to see:http://www.amd.com/us/products/desk...6670/Pages/amd-radeon-hd-6670-overview.aspx#2
Is this thread a joke? No, its as serious as can be.
Edit: Model number suggestions for XFX in the future:
6670LT for videocards using DDR3 memory offering 50% less total memory bandwidth resulting in a possible 50% hit in overall graphics performance
6670 for videocards meeting official AMD specifications
6670GT for videocards exceeding official AMD specifications
So simple.
So tell me, do I have a valid complaint against Sapphire for making and selling the non-reference VaporX 5870's I have? Reference cards have a blower cooler that exhausts the hot air out of the case. Reference cards run at different clocks. Reference cards can have their voltage manipulated via software, mine cannot.