AMD Radeon HD 6950 1GB review
Fast, good-value and overclockable - this is the best card to buy for under £200.
There’s a war going on in the world of mid-range graphics cards, and every month claims a new victim. March’s graphics card line-up had the AMD Radeon HD 6950, which won a Best Buy, followed by the Nvidia GeForce GTX 560 Ti, which was slightly cheaper and faster if you were prepared to overclock it.
This month sees AMD’s response – a slightly cut-down HD 6950 with 1GB instead of 2GB RAM, for around £40 less than the 2GB version. It’s also around the same price as the GTX 560 Ti.
The card is identical to the 2GB HD 6950 in every other way. It has the same 800 MHz core clock speed, 1,408 stream processors and its memory runs at 1,250MHz – it just has half the memory modules. Like the original HD 6950, it destroyed our Call of Duty 4 test, managing 89.6fps at 1,680×1,050 and 4x anti-aliasing and 87.8fps at 1,920×1,080. We were more interested in our Crysis benchmark. At our standard High settings it managed 67fps at 1,680×1,050 and 59.8fps at 1,920×1,080 – identical to the 2GB HD 6950, within statistical variation.
Crysis’ Very High settings take up more texture memory than the High settings, so we were expecting to see a difference, but again the card managed a very playable 38fps – to all intents and purposes identical to the 2GB version’s 37.72fps. Crysis doesn’t seem to need more than 1GB of graphics memory for textures, even at maximum settings. The only real difference we saw was in 3DMark 11, where the 2GB 6950’s 1,633 was very slightly ahead of the 1GB card’s 1,612.
This is such a tiny difference that we still consider the cards neck and neck. The only reason to buy the 2GB card is to future-proof yourself against future, more graphics memory-intensive titles, such as Crysis 2, due for release just as we went to print. Despite this, there’s still Nvidia’s rival Radeon 560 Ti to consider. This is easy to overclock, and boosting its core speed from the stock 820MHz to 950MHz gives it similar performance to the 6950. However, AMD’s card is also easy to overclock – we had no problems boosting the core from 800 to 840MHz and memory from 1,250 to 1,325MHz. This added a few FPS to each of our benchmarks to make the card comfortably faster than its Nvidia rival.
Based on its performance in current games, the 1GB Radeon HD 6950 is the best-value graphics card there is. Until we’ve benchmarked both cards with Crysis 2 we can’t think of a reason to buy the 2GB version – our conclusions of that test will be published here in a couple of weeks.
Basic Specifications | |
---|---|
Price | £179 |
Rating | ***** |
Details | www.amd.com |
Award | Best Buy |
Interface | PCI Express x16 2.1 |
Crossfire/SLI | CrossFireX |
Slots taken up | 2 |
Brand | AMD |
Graphics Processor | AMD Radeon HD 6950 |
Memory | 1,024MB GDDR5 |
Memory interface | 256-bit |
GPU clock speed | 800MHz |
Memory speed | 1.25GHz |
Card length | 275mm |
Features | |
Architecture | 1,408 stream processors |
Anti aliasing | 24x |
Anisotropic filtering | 16x |
Connectors | |
DVI outputs | 2 |
VGA outputs | 0 |
S-video output | no |
S-Video input | no |
Composite outputs | no |
Composite inputs | no |
Component outputs | no |
HDMI outputs | 1 |
Power leads required | 2x 6-pin PCI Express |
Extras | |
Accessories | none |
Software included | none |
Benchmark Results | |
Call of Duty 4 1680 4xAA | 89.6fps |
Call of Duty 4 1440 4xAA | 89.3fps |
Crysis 1680 High 4xAA | 67.0fps |
Crysis 1440 High 4xAA | 85.1fps |
Buying Information | |
Warranty | one-year RTB |
Price | £179 |
Supplier | http://www.pixmania.co.uk |
Details | www.amd.com |