A Note On Crossfire, 4K Compatibility, Power, & The Test

Before we dive into our formal testing, there are a few brief testing notes that bear mentioning.

First and foremost, on top of our normal testing we did some additional Crossfire compatibility testing to see if AMD’s new XDMA Crossfire implementation ran into any artifacting or other issues that we didn’t experience elsewhere.  The good news there is that outside of the typical scenarios where games simply don’t scale with AFR – something that affects SLI and CF equally – we didn’t see any artifacts in the games themselves. The closest we came to a problem was with the intro videos for Total War: Rome 2, which have black horizontal lines due to the cards trying to AFR render said video at a higher framerate than it played at. Once in-game Rome was relatively fine; relatively because it’s one of the games we have that doesn’t see any performance benefit from AFR.

Unfortunately AMD’s drivers for 290X are a bit raw when it comes to Crossfire. Of note, when running at a 4K resolution, we had a few instances of loading a game triggering an immediate system reboot. Now we’ve had crashes before, but nothing quite like this. After reporting it to AMD, AMD tells us that they’ve been able to reproduce the issue and have fixed it for the 290X launch drivers, which will be newer than the press drivers we used. Once those drivers are released we’ll be checking to confirm, but we have no reason to doubt AMD at this time.

Speaking of 4K, due to the two controller nature of the PQ321 monitor we use there are some teething issues related to using 4K right now. Most games are fine at 4K, however we have found games that both NVIDIA and AMD have trouble with at one point or another. On the NVIDIA side Metro will occasionally lock up after switching resolutions, and on the AMD side GRID 2 will immediately crash if using the two controller (4K@60Hz) setup. In the case of the latter dropping down to a single controller (4K@30Hz) satisfies GRID while allowing us to test at 4K resolutions, and with V-sync off it doesn’t have a performance impact versus 60Hz, but it is something AMD and Codemasters will need to fix.

Furthermore we also wanted to offer a quick update on the state of Crossfire on AMD’s existing bridge based (non-XDMA) cards. The launch drivers for the 290X do not contain any further Crossfire improvements for bridge based cards, which means Eyefinity Crossfire frame pacing is still broken for all APIs. Of particular note for our testing, the 280X Crossfire setup ends up in a particularly nasty failure mode, simply dropping every other frame. It’s being rendered, as evidenced by the consumption of the Present call, however as our FCAT testing shows it’s apparently not making it to the master card. This has the humorous outcome of making the frame times rather smooth, but it makes Crossfire all but worthless as the additional frames are never displayed. Hopefully AMD can put a fork in the matter once and for all next month.

A Note On Testing Methodologies & Sustained Performance

Moving on to the matter of our testing methodology, we want to make note of some changes since our 280X review earlier this month. After having initially settled on Metro: Last Light for our gaming power/temp/noise benchmark, in a spot of poor planning on our part we have discovered that Metro scales poorly on SLI/CF setups, and as a result doesn't push those setups very hard. As such we have switched from Metro to Crysis 3 for our power/temp/noise benchmarking, as Crysis 3 was our second choice and has a similar degree of consistency to it as Metro while scaling very nicely across both AMD and NVIDIA multi-GPU setups. For single-GPU cards the impact on noise is measurably minor, as the workloads are similar, however power consumption will be a bit different due to the difference in CPU workloads between the benchmarks.

We also want to make quick note of our testing methodologies and how they are or are not impacted by temperature based throttling. For years we have done all of our GPU benchmarking by looping gaming benchmarks multiple times, both to combat the inherent run-to-run variation that we see in benchmarking, and more recently to serve as a warm-up activity for cards with temperature based throttling. While these methods have proved sufficient for the Radeon 7000 series, the GeForce 600 series, and even the GeForce 700 series, due to the laws of physics AMD's 95C throttle point takes longer to get to than NVIDIA's 80C throttle point. As a result it's harder to bring the 290X up to its sustained temperatures before the end of our benchmark runs. It will inevitably hit 95C in quiet mode, but not every benchmark runs long enough to reach that before the 3rd or 4th loop.

For the sake of consistency with past results we have not altered our benchmark methodology. However we wanted to be sure to point out this fact before getting to benchmarking, so that there’s no confusion over how we’re handling the matter. Consequently we believe our looping benchmarks run long enough to generally reach sustained performance numbers, but in all likelihood some of our numbers on the shortest benchmarks will skew low. For the next iteration of our benchmark suite we’re most likely going to need to institute a pre-heating phase for all cards to counter AMD’s 95C throttle point.

The Drivers

The press drivers for the 290X are Catalyst 13.11 Beta v5 (The “v” is AMD’s nomenclature), which identify themselves as being from the driver branch 13.250. These are technically still in the 200 branch of AMD’s drivers, but this is the first appearance of 250, as Catalyst 13.11 Beta v1 was still 13.200. AMD doesn’t offer release notes on these beta drivers, but we found that they offered distinct improvements in GRID 2 and to a lesser extent Battlefield 3, and have updated our earlier results accordingly.

Meanwhile for NVIDIA we’re using the recently released “game ready” 331.58 WHQL drivers.

CPU: Intel Core i7-4960X @ 4.2GHz
Motherboard: ASRock Fatal1ty X79 Professional
Power Supply: Corsair AX1200i
Hard Disk: Samsung SSD 840 EVO (750GB)
Memory: G.Skill RipjawZ DDR3-1866 4 x 8GB (9-10-9-26)
Case: NZXT Phantom 630 Windowed Edition
Monitor: Asus PQ321
Video Cards: AMD Radeon R9 290X
XFX Radeon R9 280X Double Dissipation
AMD Radeon HD 7970 GHz Edition
AMD Radeon HD 7970
AMD Radeon HD 6970
AMD Radeon HD 5870
NVIDIA GeForce GTX Titan
NVIDIA GeForce GTX 780
NVIDIA GeForce GTX 770
Video Drivers: NVIDIA Release 331.58
AMD Catalyst 13.11 Beta v1
AMD Catalyst 13.11 Beta v5
OS: Windows 8.1 Pro

 

Meet The Radeon R9 290X Metro: Last Light
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  • xtrememorph - Thursday, October 24, 2013 - link

    With temp of 94 Celsius power draw of 405W during heavy load, don't this felt like a card that is heavily OC instead of technological innovation? Price wise.. i like it!!
  • xtrememorph - Thursday, October 24, 2013 - link

    ok regards to the price again.. with high Watt usage.. so in long run it will be more expensive to run. right?
  • TheJian - Friday, October 25, 2013 - link

    LOL...YEP over 4+yrs you'd be right as the wasted electricity adds up over that kind of time assuming you are an avid gamer before even buying this type of card.
  • hellcinder - Thursday, October 24, 2013 - link

    I'm confused. You're talking about $550 being a great bargain, yet you can get a 7990 for that price....Are you guys forgetting to take your ADD pills? What's so special about this 290 vs a 7990 when we throw in price models?
  • Shark321 - Thursday, October 24, 2013 - link

    7990 sucks. It's as loud as the 290x, draws even more power, and you get all the Crossfire problems.
  • zeock9 - Thursday, October 24, 2013 - link

    1. 7990 still has frame pacing issues in resolution above 1440p.
    2. CF scaling is much better for 290x since it is a single card.

    If you plan on gaming at 1080 with a single gpu solution, you don't need these top end cards to begin with, they are premium enthusiats' cards for those who can and will get the most out of them.

    So yes, they have plenty more to offer that 7990 currently can't.
  • t41nt3d - Thursday, October 24, 2013 - link

    You're obviously someone can't afford the best gpu's because you absolutely need them at 1080p.

    All this nonsense from people who have inferior cards thinking they can run max quality at 1080p astounds me, considering in the most demanding games and as is being proven with next gen games, the best single gpu's at the moment will just about run avg at 60fps on 1080p.
  • zeock9 - Thursday, October 24, 2013 - link

    And for people like you, they have mid tier cf/sli solutions like 7870cf or 660ti sli.

    Again, these premium cards are for those who want nothing but the best and going all out with their setups, and to those performance oriented minds, $550 indeed is a bargain. Period.
  • konondrum - Thursday, October 24, 2013 - link

    "To say it’s been a busy month for AMD is probably something of an understatement. After hosting a public GPU showcase in Hawaii just under a month ago, the company has already launched the first 5 cards in the Radeon 200 series – the 280X, 270X, 260X, 250, and 240 – and AMD isn’t done yet."

    I'm sorry but this statement is just plain silly marketing talk. Yes, I know with Mantle and RealAudio AMD is definitely trying to move forward and innovate.. but seriously? The "first 5 cards in the Radeon 200 series..." are already 2 years old (or at least what 6-9 months for Bonaire?) I come to AnandTech for in depth reviews and discussions about new technology, this is just lazily repeating AMD's marketing material.

    And while the overall performance of this card is impressive, the power consumption, thermals and noise levels are completely unacceptable. The GTX 480 was rightfully mocked at release, and this is at least as bad. This is definitely not the direction we need to be headed. I would never pay $500+ for a video card, but if I did, I sure as hell would be willing to pay a premium for a card that doesn't sound like a jet engine taking off.
  • Shark321 - Thursday, October 24, 2013 - link

    "The GTX 480 was rightfully mocked at release, and this is at least as bad." it's not "as" bad. A German review site compared the 290x to the 480 and in Uber mode the 290x is WAY louder than the 480.

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