Based on the 7900 XTX and RX 7900 XT SKUs, these TUF Gaming cards include a custom-built triple-fan design that takes up 3.6 slots and is powered by three 8-pin power connectors. In a recent update, A... ASUS posts Radeon RX 7900 Series TUF Gaming specs, incl clocks frequencies
A bit disappointing, but I don't know what I expected, they're always barely any different out of the box. There's so many rumours swirling around regarding the 7900XTX's much lower than expected clocks, I wonder what the truth is.
YOU CAN'T HANDLE THE TRUTH. Sorry, my Jack Nicholson is showing. I wonder if the chiplet design is not yet as optimized as it should be and some things had to be scarified in the first iteration of this non-monolithic die.
There were rumours the 7900XT/XTX had to be taped out again to fix some clock frequency issue not present on the lower end cards. Sorry, a bit too busy to go find the details at the moment.
The last I heard of that rumour it states that the 7900XT/X that will be launched will have that flaw, and the fixed versions will be named 7950 and 7990.
I think the TUF versions are now their entry line, so it makes sense that they aren`t that catchy to the eye, like the high end versions. Personally, i like the simple and understated style of TUF cards, the problem is the ASUS tax...
wait and see but really think about how it's made...imho if there's glitches it will be in the GCD (i/o die equivalent) as it has twice the number of fanout wires to ryzen - 50 and they're thinner packed into a similar area and the Infinity Fabric is a bit power hungry @ 1.3 picojoules per bit. but some issues may well be that cache doesn't scale as well on a node shrink nor do the external interfaces (using that extremely thin wire) in all reality MCM GPUs could almost be described as acting opposite of MCM CPUs in construction.
In mainstream, the bottom seems to be the Dual, whereas in enthusiat it could indeed be TUF. In the mainstream segment TUF is still considerably more expensive than Dual, so it can't be trash (relatively speaking).
3.5 slot cooler + extra pci-e connector just for a 5% factory overclock is pretty underwhelming. Of course it's a win-win for ASUS; save money by recycling NV4000 coolers while at the same time justifying price higher than MSRP because beefier cooling solution/moar powar/OC.
It's not the looks I'm disappointed in, it looks exactly like what I expected, like any other TUF card from the last few years. It's the disturbingly low clocks are. And yes it is their entry level card, but it's often built better than others and is indicative of what clocks to expect from other models. My current card is a TUF and for the 7900XTX I'd likely get a TUF model as well if I buy one, assuming it keeps to that standard. That and it's too procreating big like all the others, it'll take and block all but 1 PCIE slot on my full sized X570 board, and that's a problem.
The lower clocks seem to be a "problem" of the upcoming 7900 GPUs, so i don`t think there`s anything Asus can do about it...
Yeah that's what I was saying, if Asus's has such low clocks, they all probably will have relatively low clocks compared to expectations.
As sad as it sounds, this is a "do not buy gen", Nvidia need to lower prices by a good 30% and AMD will be a fail even with cheaper prices until the good 7950 comes out. I was hoping for a good upgrade for 4k but will have to wait to next gen, not too worried tbh.