www.VIPERLAIR.com
 
Price Search: for
HIS Radeon 5670 IceQ 512MB
Written by Scott Harness   
Sunday, 07 February 2010 00:00

thumbHIS Radeon 5670 IceQ 512MB

Sitting at sub $100, and sporting a custom PCB and cooling design, this card breaks away from the pack. We find out if it's worth it.

Manufacturer:
Price:

It doesn't seem all that long ago that AMD's 5xxx series first appeared, but already AMD has DX11 parts in all three market segments. We've looked at the 57xx series but today's product comes from the 56xx series. The card in question is the and it can be had for under $100. use a custom PCB design for their take on the 5670, and further deviate from the standard card by also using custom cooling, the venerable but highly effective IceQ cooling set-up. The specifications however, match the AMD reference.

This looks to be an interesting card; it's sub $100, needs no external power, can perform Software CrossfireX (CrossfireX without the use of a bridge connector) and supports all the 5xxx series features such as DirectX 11 and HDMI Audio Bit-streaming. This card has mainstream gamer and/or HTPC written all over it, so let's check out the .

{mosmodule module=AdsenseContent

Specifications

specs

 

box_box1 box_box2 box_box3 box_box4

The box for the HIS 5670 IceQ 512MB (128bit) GDDR5 follows the latest HIS theme of white and blue, with images of icebergs and Excalibur. The rear of the box uses a lot of logos and lists to give you as much information as possible on the features of the card and what you're getting. Inside the box is another blue box with the contents.

box_contents1

Included with the HIS 5670 IceQ 512MB (128bit) GDDR5 package is the card itself and a small folder with the software disk. Of note, is that the driver available on the AMD/ATI website at time of writing, the Catalyst 10.1 suite, is not the driver you need. Hopefully, the 10.2's will support the 5670, but until then the driver on the disk is the one to use.

 

card_card1 card_fan1

The card is very distinctive in the HIS manner; it's a two slot set-up with the clear IceQ cooling set-up The Fan is a translucent blue and goes well with the blue PCB and the blue sticker.

 

card_cable1 card_back1

HIS have the cabling for the cooling sleeved and tucked neatly into the side of the cooler. The back of the card is completely uneventful although it does show off nicely the blue PCB colouring.

card_io1

The IO back panel for the card is a two slot set-up An air exhaust grill runs along the top edge with the three ports below. There is a single VGA, a single (Native) HDMI and a single DVI port.

Overall the card is quite small, extending out about an inch longer than the PCIe slot it occupies, but it is of course a two slot cooling set-up so keep that in mind. Quite a nice looking card.

Testing

Test Setup: Intel Core 2 Duo 6420 @ 3.20GHz, 4GB of OCZ PC2-6400 Ram @ 960MHz, Asus Blitz Formula, Silicon Power M10 32GB + WD640AAKS, Asetek Waterchill Watercooling, Hyper Type M 730w PSU. All latest drivers as of December 2009 and the OS is Windows 7 64bit.

For comparison, we are using an MSI GT240 Card and an MSI 4670.

Software

Left 4 Dead 2 – Recording a custom demo on the Dead Center – Hotel level (inside in the inferno), we used FRAPS to record frame rates as we played back the demo on all cards at same settings.

Enemy Territory: Quake Wars – ETQW gives us our lone OpenGL test results as we run through a recorded demo on the Slipgate level. Settings for all cards were the same.

Racedriver: GRID – Grid has some very good looking visuals. We used FRAPS as we took a Skyline for a test drive around the Ring. Settings for each card were set to highest possible for that card.

Assassin's Creed – We headed for the nearest tower from the bureau roof in Acre and repeatedly climbed to the top. With 2 leaps of faith and a good look of the city from on high, we once again used FRAPS to record our frame rates. Settings for each card were set to highest possible for that card.

Crysis Warhead – We used the Framebuffer benchmark tool to run through the Ambush demo and recorded the results with FRAPS. Settings for each card were set to highest possible for that card.

Devil May Cry 4 (Benchmark) – DMC4's benchmark provides a nice way of testing that anyone can do. Results are all from the benchmark itself, and include average frame rates as well as 4 graphs for each level tested. Settings for all cards were the same.

 



 
 
AMD CPU'S
 
Intel CPU'S
 
ATI Video Cards
 
NVIDIA Cards
 
Memory
Viperlair News
 
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

Banner
 
 

All content © 2001-2010 www.Viperlair.com. Any trademarks used are properties of their respective owners. All rights reserved.