Launching This Week: Radeon R9 280X

The highest performing part of today’s group of launches will be AMD’s Radeon R9 280X. Based on the venerable Tahiti GPU, the R9 280X is the 6th SKU based on Tahiti and the 3rd SKU based on a fully enabled part.

AMD GPU Specification Comparison
  Asus Radeon R9 280X DCU II TOP XFX Radeon R9 280X DD (Ref. Clocked) AMD Radeon HD 7970 GHz Edition AMD Radeon HD 7970
Stream Processors 2048 2048 2048 2048
Texture Units 128 128 128 128
ROPs 32 32 32 32
Core Clock 970MHz 850MHz 1000MHz 925MHz
Boost Clock 1070MHz 1000MHz 1050MHz N/A
Memory Clock 6.4GHz GDDR5 6GHz GDDR5 6GHz GDDR5 5.5GHz GDDR5
VRAM 3GB 3GB 3GB 3GB
Typical Board Power >250W? 250W 250W 250W
Width Double Slot Double Slot Double Slot Double Slot
Length 11.25" 11" N/A N/A
Warranty 3 Years Lifetime N/A N/A
Launch Date 10/11/13 10/11/13 06/22/12 01/09/12
Launch Price $309 $329? $499 $549

In a nutshell, the R9 280X is designed to sit somewhere in between the original 7970 and the 7970 GHz Edition. For memory it has the same 3GB of 6GHz GDDR5 as the 7970GE, while on the GPU side it has PowerTune Boost functionality like the 7970GE, but at lower clockspeeds. At its peak we’re looking at 1000MHz for the boost clock on R9 280X versus 1050MHz on the 7970GE. Stranger yet is the base clock, which is set at just 850MHz, 75MHz lower than the 7970’s sole GPU clock of 925MHz and 150MHz lower than the 7970GE’s base clock. AMD wasn’t able to give us a reason for this unusual change, but we believe it’s based on some kind of balance between voltages, yields, and intended power consumption.

With that in mind, even with the lower base clock because this is a boost part it will have no problem outperforming the original 7970, as we’ll see in our performance section. Between the higher memory clocks and boost virtually always active, real world performance is going to be clearly and consistently above the 7970. At the same time however performance will be below the 7970GE, and as the latter is slowly phased out it looks like AMD will let its fastest Tahiti configuration go into full retirement, leaving the R9 280X as the fastest Tahiti card on the market.

As an aside, starting with the R9 280X and applicable to all of AMD’s video cards, AMD is no longer advertising the base GPU clockspeed of their parts. The 7970GE for example, one of the only prior boost enabled parts, was advertised as “1GHz Engine Clock (up to 1.05GHz with boost)”. Whereas the 280X and other cards are simply advertised as “Up to 1GHz” or whatever the boost clock may be.

As of press time AMD hasn’t gotten back to us on why this is. There’s really little to say until we have a formal answer, but since these cards are rarely going to reach their highest boost clockspeed (the fact that we can’t see the real clockspeed only further muddles matters) we believe it’s important that both the base clock and boost clock are published side-by-side, the same way as AMD has done it in the past and NVIDIA does it in the present. In that respect at least some of AMD’s partners have been more straightforward, as we’ve seen product fliers that list both clocks.

Getting back to the matter of 280X, let’s put the theoretical performance of the card in perspective. As R9 280X is utilizing a fully enabled Tahiti GPU we’re looking at a full 2048 stream processors organized over 8 CU arrays, paired with 32 ROPs. Compared to the original 7970 this gives R9 280X between 92% and 108% of the 7970’s shader/ROP/texture throughput, and 109% of the memory bandwidth. Or compared to the 7970GE we’re looking at 85% to 95% of the shader/ROP/texture throughput and 100% of the memory bandwidth.

Since this is another Tahiti part, TDP hasn’t officially changed from the 7970GE. The official TDP is 250W and the use of boost should keep actual TDP rather close to that point, though the use of lower clockspeeds and lower voltages means that in practice the TDP will be somewhat lower than 7970GE’s. For idle TDP AMD isn’t giving out an official number, but that should be in the 10W-15W range.

Moving on, the MSRP on the R9 280X will be $300. This puts the card roughly in the middle of the gulf between NVIDIA’s GeForce GTX 760 and GTX 770 with no direct competition outside of a handful of heavily customized GTX 760 cards. Against AMD’s lineup this will be going up opposite the outgoing 7970 cards, depending on which the R9 280X can be anywhere between faster and equal to the outgoing cards, but unlike the 7970s the R9 280X won’t have the Never Settle Forever game bundle attached.

Finally, because the R9 280X is based on the existing Tahiti GPU, this is going to be a purely virtual launch. AMD’s partners will be launching custom designs right out of the gate, and while we don’t have a product list we don’t expect any two cards to be identical. AMD has put together some reference boards utilizing a newly restyled cooler for testing and photo opportunities, but these reference boards will not be sampled or sold. Instead they’ve sent us a pair of retail boards which we’ll go over in the following sections: the XFX Radeon R9 280X Double Dissipation, and the Asus Radeon R9 280X DirectCU II TOP.

Please note that for all practical purposes we’ll be treating the XFX R9 280X DD as our reference 280X board, as it ships at the 280X reference clocks of 850MHz base, 1000MHz boost, 6000MHz VRAM. We expect other retail cards to be similar to the XFX card, although there’s still some outstanding confusion from XFX on whether their card will be a $299 card or not.

Fall 2013 GPU Pricing Comparison
AMD Price NVIDIA
  $650 GeForce GTX 780
  $400 GeForce GTX 770
Radeon R9 280X $300  
  $250 GeForce GTX 760
Radeon R9 270X $200  
  $180 GeForce GTX 660
  $150 GeForce GTX 650 Ti Boost
Radeon R7 260X $140  

 

TrueAudio Technology: GPUs Get Advanced Audio Processing XFX Radeon R9 280X Double Dissipation
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  • maybeimwrong - Tuesday, October 8, 2013 - link

    Perhaps I'm in the minority here, but I am concerned that I have to "Return to Anandtech" from a major new product review. This site is not AMDtech. If you want to have a special AMD section that aggregates relevant content, I'm fine with that. I am not fine with reviews being visible only in a place that presents no means of accessing general content on the site. Presenting review articles in this way is a terrible decision, and readers will stop trusting your content if you keep it up. I say this as a big fan of the site: please change the way "AMD" articles are handled immediately.
  • SolMiester - Tuesday, October 8, 2013 - link

    Hmmm, just noticed that....buy out complete?
  • toyotabedzrock - Tuesday, October 8, 2013 - link

    TrueAudio might die because they didn't add it to all their cards, very lazy and half baked.
  • rtho782 - Tuesday, October 8, 2013 - link

    Can you Crossfire an R280 with a 7970? Would make for a cheap upgrade path as they are basically the same card...
  • hodakaracer96 - Tuesday, October 8, 2013 - link

    I currently own a 2-way sli 770 setup so I may be biased. It seems NVIDIA can still charge a premuim (maybe $50) over the R9 280x due to much better SLI/crossfire capiblity (I know the newest AMD beta drivers fix latency issues, but the fact NVIDIA does frame pacing in hardware makes me feel better about it) and better performance/watt. My room gets pretty toasty and my 750 watt power supply is already on the edge. even an extra 50 watts from 2 - R9280x's would be unwanted.
  • Frenetic Pony - Tuesday, October 8, 2013 - link

    When it was AMD was firing key positions I knew it was bad, but now we know specifically HOW bad. Not a singe new GPU. I don't want Nvidia to have a monopoly damn it, maybe AMD should be looking at plans to sell to someone like Qualcomm if this holiday season doesn't hit it big for them.
  • FuriousPop - Tuesday, October 8, 2013 - link

    Aren't these the reference cards? So won't there be more tweaks, different coolers, OC's etc when the rest of them get a hold of it and start making their changes?

    If these truelly are reference cards, i thought these looked pretty good considering...

    I understand an Asus one is tested - to be fair i have 2xasus 7970's tops, they tend to be slighty slower then the rest of the pack by little numbers however with better temps/noise lvls...

    Bring on the 7970 bring bro aka. Titan Killer!
  • bwat47 - Monday, December 9, 2013 - link

    Nvidia has done re-badges like this too, they both do it.
  • b3nzint - Tuesday, October 8, 2013 - link

    I see the cooler on r9-290x got 3 air tunnel at the back. Is ref. r9-280x will use the same cooler?
  • Futureman666 - Tuesday, October 8, 2013 - link

    now let's see NVidia lower the price of the GTX 770 4 GB so I can buy two of them and upgrade my rig . The price of those card are not right at the moment they should have been way lower . hope that AMD R9 will put enough pressure on NVidia . The only sour on this review seems once again AMD drivers (which seems to suck time and time again ) maybe Ryan did not have enough time to try 2 R9 280x card in crossfire .. I would have been impressed to see a comparison between the NVidia offerings 2 x gtx 760 and 2 x Gtx 770 in sli versus ... Maybe the damn drivers where not ready again to support these 2 cards in crossfire .. i'm eager to see the results

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