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John Morris & Sean Portnoy

AMD Radeon HD 6970, 6950 benchmarks: Good, but can't beat Nvidia GeForce GTX 580

By | December 15, 2010, 5:47pm PST

Summary: The long-awaited launch of AMD’s new high-performance desktop graphics cards — the Radeon HD 6970 and 6950 — has just occurred, but they’re not quite the Nvidia beaters that many had hoped for. While they are superior to their Radeon HD 5870 and 5850 predecessors, their performance according to benchmarking is mixed when it comes [...]

The long-awaited launch of AMD’s new high-performance desktop graphics cards — the Radeon HD 6970 and 6950 — has just occurred, but they’re not quite the Nvidia beaters that many had hoped for. While they are superior to their Radeon HD 5870 and 5850 predecessors, their performance according to benchmarking is mixed when it comes to the latest GeForce GTX 580 and 570 boards.

The bottom line is simple: The GTX 580 is the still the fastest single-card graphics solution out there. The Radeon HD 6970 can’t compete with it, though it does match up better with the GTX 570 — HotHardware found that it was faster than the 570 on four of the eight apps and games the site tested. (Anandtech came to a similar conclusion.) It is a little more expensive than the GTX 570 at $369, however. The 6950 beats the 5870, but is priced slightly more at $299, so AMD’s previous flagship GPU may be a good bargain if you can live with 1GB of video RAM.

It’s not all bad news for AMD, though, as the new cards are still more power-efficient and quieter than Nvidia’s latest Fermi boards. HotHardware also saw some good scaling in CrossFire mode for the new 6900 series. Finally, there’s still the Radeon HD 6990 dual-GPU solution — a.k.a. Antilles — that AMD will launch early next year. To date, Nvidia won’t have anything to match it, so if you’re looking for colossal performance from an AMD board, it might be worth the wait (and expense).

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Sean Portnoy is a freelance technology journalist.

Disclosure

Sean Portnoy

Sean Portnoy is a freelance technology journalist; currently, all work that Sean does is on a contractural basis. Sean has also written corporate communications documents for CA.

Sean does not accept gifts from companies he covers. All hardware products he writes about are purchased with his own funds or are review units covered under formal loan agreements and are returned after the review is complete.

Biography

Sean Portnoy

Sean Portnoy started his tech writing career at ZDNet nearly a decade ago. He then spent several years as an editor at Computer Shopper magazine, most recently serving as online executive editor. He received a B.A. from Brown University and an M.A. from the University of Southern California.

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RE: AMD Radeon HD 6970, 6950 benchmarks: Good, but can't beat Nvidia GeForce GTX 580
Spano7 17th Nov
@Lerianis10 No kidding, GTX 580 = $500 card vs Radeon 6950 $220 card?! Radeon 6950 all the way IMO.
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So I'd save money twice over NVIDIA
Joe_Raby 15th Dec 2010
Once for the video card.

And again for the lower power supply needed to run it.

How is that bad?
@Joe_Raby

True. You have to take into account not only the speed and power of the card, but the price and electricity sucking of the graphics card.

With that, the AMD card wins HANDS DOWN!
@Lerianis10 No kidding, GTX 580 = $500 card vs Radeon 6950 $220 card?! Radeon 6950 all the way IMO.
I have been hearing for so long, wait till Cayman comes out, it's going to destroy Nvidia's cards. Well LOL is all I have to say. Now we know why it was delayed. They weren't expecting the GTX580 or 570. So they said oh no, we have to squeeze some more performance out of this thing quick! I think it's a miracle that they finally fixed X fire. In fact Nvidia better be doing some tweaks on their SLI. Which I'm sure they will, they are much quicker to handle their software issues than AMD. That's really the biggest difference in the two company's
PS, the power consumption differences are not that big between the two, since the 5xx series Fermi.
@j-mccurdy@... Pretty sure 'LOL' is not in fact all you had to say.
@Dangerous_Dave LOL I just couldn't stop myself
@j-mccurdy@...

What are you talking about? There were some issues with my 9800GTS in my laptop that didn't get fixed until this year, 3 years after I bought my gaming laptop!

If anything, AMD/ATI are quicker at fixing problems than NVidia are, hands down.
problems with amd's drivers and reliability is not opinion. radeon's troubles are well documented. I own 2 computers at this time that are amd/radeon based, and they are fine. but my main pc is intel/nvidia. my last amd card was the hd 4890. had to return for replacement twice, before giving up and going to gtx 275. not a lick of trouble with that card, till selling it. was by far my first problems with radeon, but was hoping by then, they'd have ironed it all out. wrong. anybody who has owned half the amd-ati/nvidia cards I have, has the same stories. sure, there are exceptions to the rule, but not overall, if one has owned enough of each to know. although I can't comment on these new cards, since the hd 4890 was my last radeon.
I doubt anyone who has the money for these cards, is worried about some extra change on there electric bill. I do thank amd for the prices. if it wasn't for them, we'd pay alot more. the price for 2-3 billion transistors/2-3 tflops astounds me. 1000's of apollo moon landing computers equal one of these cards. thanx amd/nvidia

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