AMD’s Radeon HD 6870 & 6850: Renewing Competition in the Mid-Range Market
by Ryan Smith on October 21, 2010 10:08 PM ESTUbisoft’s 2008 aerial action game is one of the less demanding games in our benchmark suite, particularly for the latest generation of cards. However it’s fairly unique in that it’s one of the few flying games of any kind that comes with a proper benchmark.
Unlike our previous shader-bound games, HAWX is a game that’s light on the shaders and comparatively heavier on geometry, texturing, and general rasterization. As a result it’s one of the best games for the Barts architecture, as the 6800 series comes out only a frame behind their 5800 series counterparts thanks to the equal number of ROPs and the higher clockspeeds of the 6800 series. In this game at least, 6800 and 5800 are equals.
Unfortunately for AMD, both generations may be equal, but compared to NVIDIA they’re equally slow. The EVGA GTX 460 and the GTX 470 enjoy a healthy 10% lead over the 5870/6870, while the 6850 has more in common with the GTX 460 768MB than it does the GTX 460 1GB.
Meanwhile in an action that blows our mind, the 6800 series cards in Crossfire manage to convincingly beat the 5800 series in Crossfire. Admittedly we’re talking about a difference that’s academic (169fps vs 154fps) but it’s as clear a sign as any that something special is going on with the 6800 series in Crossfire.
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Donkey2008 - Friday, October 22, 2010 - link
Can you provide a link to your website so I can read your review of the cards? That would be awesome.Natfly - Friday, October 22, 2010 - link
Sure, right here: http://tinyurl.com/36ag36dBlendMe - Friday, October 22, 2010 - link
So you're telling me I can get two 6870 and spend lest money, use less power and have more performance than a GTX 480? I like the idea of going back to what made the 48xx cards so great. Small, cheap and expandable.Can't wait for the rest of the line up.
tpurves - Friday, October 22, 2010 - link
how is it that the nvidia cards go UP in framerate when you increase the resolution from 1650 to 1920 and add 4xAA? Did you mix up some test run numbers?mapesdhs - Friday, October 22, 2010 - link
It's a pity the charts don't include SLI results for the EVGA 460. I would like to have seen
how close it came to 470 SLI, given the 470s inferior power, GPU load temp and noise
results. The 470 GPU load temps under Crysis for just one card are particularly scary;
the idea of using two 470s SLI, and even more so oc'ing them, seems like a recipe for
thermal mayhem - alien astronomers with IR telescopes would wonder what the heck
they've spotted. :D
The price drop on the 470 is interesting, but the EVGA 460 still looks like a better buy
because of the power/heat issues, especially so for those considering SLI (as I am),
and also the fact that the EVGA is as good or better than the 6870. This graph is the
one that interests me:
http://images.anandtech.com/graphs/graph3987/33232...
The stock 460 SLI is clearly nowhere near as good as 6870 CF or 470 SLI, but given
a single EVGA 460 matches the 6870, I'd really like to know how two EVGAs perform.
Any chance you could add the data later?
On the other hand, one could assume the 6870 should have some oc'ing headroom,
but toms' review didn't show that much of a gain from oc'd 6870s.
The 6870 here in the UK seems to be about 200 UKP (Aria, Scan), though the XFX
version looks to be an exception (178 from Scan). The EVGA is 174 (Scan, but no
stock yet). For those who don't want to spend that much, the 800MHz Palit Sonic
Platinum 460 has dropped down to only 163 (last week it was 183). I almost bought
two of the Palit cards last week, so I'm glad I waited.
Obviously the pricing is all over the place atm, and likely to wobble all over again
when the next 6xxxx cards are released. Either way, despite the lack of major
performance increases atm, at least there's finally some pricing/value competition.
I think I'll wait until the dust settles re pricing, then decide. Quite likely many others
will do the same.
Ian.
AtenRa - Friday, October 22, 2010 - link
Why did you run at 1920x1200 and not 1920x1080 ??most 1920x1200 monitors are extincted from the market and 1920x1080 is becoming the defacto resolution.
Lunyone - Friday, October 22, 2010 - link
Well with bowing down to nVidia on the selection of "what" GPU to use, you have lost all credibility in my eyes. Even Tom's Hardware took a higher road and agreed to use the "hand picked" GPU, but limited the clocks to near stock settings, so there was a more "real" world comparison. Who nows if this isn't the first time that this has happened at Anandtech. I notice no rebuttals on Anand's part, so I'm guessing that they are quite amazed that people are seeing how one sided this issue is. This article wouldn't affect my purchase, since I look a several sites to draw a conclusion from. But my confidence in quality and fair reporting from Anandtech's reviews have been compromised, IMHO. I don't know if I will put any merit to any on Anand's reviews, time will tell.Sunburn74 - Friday, October 22, 2010 - link
Gee. You know whats all this about Anandtech losing credibility? Nvidia specifically asked them to test one card and the consumer benefits from having this information. Its not like anandtech didn't include the reference gtx460 as well. Anything that tells the consumer more about how valuable his dollar really is, is a good thing imo.I currently have an oced radeon 5850 and it annoyed the hell out of me trying to justify whether or not the extra 30 bucks I eventually ended up paying for it, was worth it. There weren't any reviews at the time you see...
SandmanWN - Friday, October 22, 2010 - link
You can't gauge value of an overclocked card against a stock card. You have no idea what the other card can do. What you are saying is nonsense if you really put two seconds into thinking about what you just said.mindbomb - Friday, October 22, 2010 - link
we are talking about factory oc'd cards.It's not like Anand was playing around in rivatuner.