

This isn’t much less than the Radeon HD 4850, which just breaks through the 1.0 TeraFLOPs barrier, but it’s quite a lot more than the Radeon HD 4830’s 736 GigaFLOPs. Being based on the world’s most advanced manufacturing process technology means that AMD can pack a massive amount of performance into RV740 – it’s hard to believe there are 826 million transistors in the 143.75mm² die.Īlthough comparing performance between AMD’s and Nvidia’s architectures using GigaFLOPs as a metric is difficult, the Radeon HD 4770 packs a serious punch with 960 GigaFLOPs of compute power at its default clock speeds. The Radeon HD 4770 is a card the company is incredibly excited about – not least because the RV740 GPU under the heatsink is the world’s first GPU based on TSMC’s cutting edge 40nm process technology. These are typically used to further increase yields when one or more of the SIMD units are damaged. The Radeon HD 4830 took a different approach to this price point than the 4770 – it used the existing RV770 die with two of the ten SIMD units disabled in what is generally known as a dead die SKU. Although we didn’t find an awful lot of value in the 4830 when it first launched because the 4850 was the better buy, the card has been a regular fixture in our monthly buyer’s guide over the past few months now that its value has improved. The 4770 comes in at a price point that AMD has already occupied with its Radeon HD 4830 graphics card. Today, AMD is making another step forwards in the mid-range with the Radeon HD 4770 – a card that is set to be introduced for around £85 (based on the $99 MSRP we’ve been given). While Nvidia has focused very much on repurposing 18-month-old G92 technology to introduce a slew of ‘new’ graphics cards, AMD has decided to tackle the market in a different way.įirst came the Radeon HD 4670 in September last year, which delivered performance rivalling the company’s previous generation Radeon HD 3850 for around £60. The mid-range market is a lucrative one, especially with the world’s economy the way it is right now.

Now you've got a clean desktop that will save a few system resources.AMD ATI Radeon HD 4770 512MB Manufacturer: AMD Name it Shortcuts, right-click it & drag a shortcut to the folder to the Desktop. What I did in the old days, was go to Documents, & add a folder. You have 34 icons on your screen, & they always use resources. On mine I can swap the side covers from side to side. Then close the latch on them, & you can solder the covers in place. BTW, the rear slot covers can be replaced, hold them in position. One intake, 1 exhaust, & 1 on the cooler. I replaced the cooler fan (it died) & added 1 in front, so 3 120mm fans. I used flat clear plastic packaging to block the side vents. My ASUS AMD Radeon R7 250 died so I swapped in a R5 230 OEM.

The CPU is an AMD FX-6350, 16GB RAM, 2 SSDs, 1 for MX linux, 1 for win10, & 2 HDDs for storage. I may paint one of the front bezels, I think semi-gloss black would work. The only real issue is not much room for cable management.
#Amd radeon hd 5770 vs amd radeon hd 6350 512mb mod#
The mesh front is excellent & you mod the drive cages or remove 'em. IMO it is a very good case, extremely easy to cool & fairly study. Stavris I have 2 CM Elite 330s, 1 is still in the box.
