ATI Radeon HD 5800 Series Graphics Cards – Designed by the Community
The ATI Radeon HD 5800 series graphics card were released today and AMD Product Manager David Baumann expands on how these graphics cards have been effectively designed based on product and feature feedback provided by you!
The ATI RadeonTM HD 5800 series graphics card were released today – a culmination of efforts from an enormous team of people spread across the world and I get the privilege of being the product manager for it. No doubt that if you’re reading this posting, you’ll already have heard about the headline features of this new generation of graphics boards: Expand the PC experience with ATI Eyefinity multi-display technology, Accelerate with ATI Stream technology and Dominate your competition with Microsoft DirectX® 11 support (and 2x the engine of the previous generation with 2.72 teraFLOPS of processing power!).
Many of AMD’s employees take pride in directly interacting with customers and listening to what they want; likewise in my former life running a community-based site, I like to try to stay in touch with what people are looking for in their graphics cards. So, I’d like to expand a little on how these graphics cards have been effectively designed based on product and feature feedback provided by you!
First off, let’s consider some of the new image quality features present in the ATI Radeon HD 5800 Series GPUs. Following the feedback we’ve received, the texture filtering quality has been improved such that we now have a near perfect circle in the anisotropic filtering tests – the same level of filtering can be achieved irrespective of the angle the texture is at as it appears into the screen. However, beyond this, all the texture weights and levels of detail are now calculated at higher precision than previous generations of AMD GPUs (i.e. the ATI RadeonTM HD 4800 series).
Game image quality improvement doesn’t stop with texture quality though. Anti-Aliasing also sees some improvements. We’ve made some architectural changes to improve the performance of our CFAA (Custom Filter Anti-Aliasing) modes and also the performance delta between 4x Multi-Sample Anti-Aliasing (MSAA) and 8x MSAA is very small, making 8x AA attainable to use in many more cases. Additionally, largely due to your feedback, Super-Sampling Anti-Aliasing makes a comeback. Although Super-Sampling is one of the oldest types of AA we did need to make hardware changes to iterate each of the subsamples over a single draw call and this, coupled with the raw performance of ATI Radeon HD 5800 series GPUs, makes for good use-case scenarios in many DirectX® 9 and OpenGL titles.
Then we come to power. There is a general industry trend towards great power efficiency, but we’ve certainly heard that echoed from many end users, especially where GDDR5 products are concerned. With the ATI Radeon HD 5800 series we’ve implemented a new memory controller that, despite higher memory speeds and data rates, is incredibly power efficient at load and idle.1 Coupled with the 40nm process and other architectural power improvements this enables a peak board power of 188W whilst providing up to twice the performance of the previous generation (i.e. the ATI Radeon HD 4800 series GPUs)1. Additionally, we now have the capability of switching the memory speed of GDDR5 devices dynamically and enter into “low strobe mode” (a mode with similar signaling as GDDR3) enabling us to crank up to 4.8Gbps bandwidth at peak operation, and down to 0.6Gbps bandwidth at idle. When taken in conjunction with a low idle engine speed of 157Mhz this enables us to get great idle power figures of 27W or below. 1 We didn’t stop there and offered something extra to those of you running multiple GPU’s per system – by making use of Windows Vista® and Windows® 7′s “Linked Adapter” mode we can determine when the additional GPUs in a multi-GPU setup are not required to be used (such as in desktop operation) and drop their idle power even lower than 27W, thus enabling you to have fantastic performance on tap when its needed but not chewing up loads of power when it’s not.
Low power operation allows us to take care of another area that registered a lot of feedback from our users of the ATI Radeon HD 4800 Series, and that is in the area of GPU heat. Although ASIC’s can typically run at very high temperatures with no issues, many users expressed their concerns on the previous generation (i.e. the ATI Radeon HD 4800 series), but on the ATI Radeon HD 5800 series we are able to run full speeds at much lower peak temperatures. What may be perceived as the obvious trade off for lower peak operating temperatures would be that this has come from fan speed and the audibility has increased, however in the case of the ATI Radeon HD 5870 graphics card, the increased board size facilitates greater surface area for heat dissipation via the fansink, so in fact we don’t need to trade off in fan speeds. Likewise, with such low idle/desktop power thanks the low idle/desktop power we can also run the fan as low as 1200RPM, much lower than we’ve run in previous generations (i.e. the ATI Radeon HD 4800 series), while the ASIC stays in approximately a 40-50C operating temperate range (in an open case). 1 The fan itself has had changes, with new bearings that produce a much lower tone, effectively making it barely audible while idling and producing a less piercing note at speed.
We’ve also put additional protection on to the board in order to better cope with runaway power scenarios. Whilst our previous boards have been able to capture unusual thermal events in a graceful manner, runaway power scenarios resulted in the board protecting itself by shutting down. With the ATI Radeon HD 5800 series we’ve implemented a hardware-level overvolt protection scheme where a signal from the regulators can be fed into the GPU directly and the GPU can take action if the regulators indicate they are operating out of their specification. In the unlikely event that such a scenario happens, rather than the board turning off, the GPU is designed to clock down to get the regulators back into a normal operating zone and then clock back up when they have done so.
Finally, we wanted to give a little something else back to you, in the form of a new look and feel for the product. We set out to make a new fansink design that would make the board seem more of an all encompassed product, rather than merely another PC component, but still unmistakably say “ATI Radeon” (quite literally as it turns out!). Whilst the PCI Express specification would tend to dictate a fairly rectangular box, we sought to give these boards some more visual cues and styling’s, and we hope that you’ll like the result – judging by some of the images and avatars already cropping up, it appears to have already captured some people’s imaginations, and we’re getting a kick out of seeing them.
Lots of direct feedback from our user community has gone into making these new graphics processors, a product we are proud of, and one that I personally consider to be the best high-end ATI Radeon graphics board produced so far. We hope you like the fruits of your labours. Happy gaming!
Want more? See the ATI Radeon HD 5000 series in action with an ATI Eyefinity technology demonstration. Or learn more about the advanced 3D graphics capabilties build into Microsoft DirectX 11.
1 All results cited in this blog were performed on AMD reference design and measured in AMD internal labs.
David Baumann is a Product Manager at AMD. His postings are his own opinions and may not represent AMD’s positions, strategies or opinions. Links to third party sites are provided for convenience and unless explicitly stated, AMD is not responsible for the contents of such linked sites and no endorsement is implied.


If AMD wants to be a global force, they need to step up their customer service globally, not just nationally.
Also, monthly updates are great if they are well thought out. However, if AMD is just updating quickly and sloppily, updates are useless.
As we face the future, the prognosis for the dollar and for the international monetary system is grim indeed. ,
when are we expecting the HD 5870×2 to come out
im english
but im going to order in from america as everything is way 2 expesive here im not suprised that they arent shiping to uk when it will cost less to get a return ticket to america pop in to a shop buy it and fly back over with it as hand lugage
it sounds funny i know but if i buy a ticket in advance wala
its like everything over here
a xbox game in america $50 here £40-£50
£15-£20 cheaper and if your willing to wait a few weeks £6 shiping
£9 cheaper
just like the 5870 in america $399 = about £240
in uk shop £400
even with £20-£30 shiping is so much cheaper
UK availability 0 yep a big fat 0, since initial release it seems suppliers have either held back to keep price artificially high ($100 more than USA anyway)or they simply are not available at all which makes the slick advertising very disappointing. Will AMD be shipping more to Europe/UK? Or have you already done so? in which case perhaps pressure on the suppliers?
Aloha! ttx
So were are they? This article carrys no date but the first comment was on the 23rd September thats well over a month ago. I ordered a computer with crossfire 5850′s on the 27th October and it cant be built because these cards are nowhere in sight, niether are they at any of the main component dealers here in the UK. Whats all this about if you cant even supply the cards.
I agree with comment #39, it would seem impossible to get a hold of these cards. I have had mine on back order since 8th Oct and still nothing. I have looked at all the component sites I know of (Dabs, Scan, Ebuyer, Overclockers, Eclipse and more) there is no stock anywhere. Come on now sort it out.
Concur with 39/40. I see no one in the US as having these in stock. Its been 3-4 weeks now since I built my new Win7 machine but still running an old Nvidia 8600GT since I can’t get ahold of a 5850/5870 anywhere. Or is this just vaporware now?
With direct audio transfer for blueray and hd radio when will a 5000 series all in wonder card be available? If in planning stages do away with s-video and provide HDMI.
I have a 5850, in order to get it to fit in my Lian-Li i had to remove a screw from the back plate of the graphics card. Why would you not try to keep the screws as flush as possible?
Is my card at any risk with this one screw removed?
I think i’ll post this over at Powercolor instead, oops.