PowerColor Radeon R9 286 TurboDuo OC Review

Today we’re going to take a closer at PowerColor’s take on the latest addition to AMD’s top-tier graphics card lineup – Radeon R9 285.

Design and Construction

There’s nothing to say about the physique of this graphics card that immediately jumped out to us the moment we took it out of its fairly-straightforward packaging (which by the way doesn’t have anything on it apart from anti-static bubble wrap and a manual).

PowerColor R9 285 Philippines

This doesn’t mean that it looks horrible though. We think that a lot of AMD users will appreciate the Red-on-Black paint job of the card’s robust plastic shroud, complemented by two black 5-bladed fans that keeps things nice and cool for the graphics card (more in that later).

Taking out the plastic shroud reveals a well-designed heat sink with well-spaced fin array for better cooling performance. The responsibility of dissipating the heat away from the GPU is mainly handled by three copper heat pipes that are soldered to a fairly-wide copper base.

PowerColor-Radeon-R9-285-TurboDuo-OC

At the top you’ll see a pair of 6-pin PCIe ports which are required to power this bad boy up, and around the back there are a quartet of display ports; 2 Dual-Link DVI (DVI-I and DVI-D), one DisplayPort and an HDMI out.

There are two usual culprits that are missing on this card; a backplate and CrossFire connector. The latter is understandable since this card will still CrossFire with other supported card through the PCIe x16 slot. The absence of a backplate, however, on the R9 285 TurboDuo is quite disappointing, but it compensates for it (or at least it tries to) with a black PCB, if you’re in to that kind of thing.

Test Bench
AMD A10-7850K @ 4.0GHz
ASUS A88X Gamer Motherboard
8GB G.Skill Ripjaws X 2133Mhz dual-channel DDR3 RAM
256GB ADATA XPG SX900 Solid-State Drive
EVGA 500B 500W PSU
ASUS VX239H 1080p IPS Monitor

Specs

Software used:

Windows 8 64-bit
AMD Catalyst 14.9
Fraps (frame rate measurement)
Open Hardware Monitor (Temp Monitoring)

Performance (Games)

BF4

BioShock

Crysis 3

FarCry 3

GRID

Tomb Raider

With the exclusion of Far Cry 3, the PowerColor Radeon R9 285 TurboDuo managed to give us a respectable 40+fps on all of the popular titles that we’ve ran. Although it struggled to reach that same kind of frame rate on Far Cry 3, above 30fps with little to no compromise on quality is still something to write home about.

Synthetic Benchmarks

Along with measuring what kind of frame rate we can get out of the graphics card, we also ran a few synthetic benchmark tests on it.

Here are the results we got which we placed side-by-side with the scores that we got from the Strix GTX 750Ti:

3DMark 11 (Performance and Extreme)

3DMark FireStrike (Performance and Extreme)

CineBench

3DMark Vantage (Performance and Extreme)

FurMark (1080p and 720p)

Unigine Heaven 4 (Basic and Extreme)

Temperature and Fan Noise

When idle, the temps on the card hovered around the 40 – 45 degree Celsius mark with the fans spinning at 35% of its full capacity. When we fired up FurMark benchmark test, the temps soared at around 70°C and maxed out at 80-degree Celsius with the two fans spinning at little over 4300RPM.

During the test, we got a respectable average frame rate of 45fps, with the lowest one being at 42fps and topped out at 48fps.

R9 285 FurMark 1080p

Noise has never been an issue with this card, even at high temperatures. Despite not having the fancy 0DB fan noise technology found on some cards, the two 5-bladed fans did an awesome job of keeping things nice and cool without generating a lot of noise, or at least nothing cumbersome.

Conclusion

The PowerColor Radeon R9 285 TurboDuo has most, if not all of the things one would want from a mid-range graphics card; it offer’s near-silent cooling solution, quite generous factory overclock and low TDP which will allow user to run this card on a decent 500W PSU like the one we used for this review.

PowerColor Radeon R9 285 TurboDuo OC specs:
Process: 28nm
Architecture: GCN1.2
Stream Processors: 1792
Compute Performance: 3.29 TFLOPS
Engine Clock: 945MHz
VRAM: 2GB DDR5
Memory Clock: 5.5GHz GDDR5
Memory Bus Width: 256-bit
Bandwidth: 176GB/s
TDP: 190W
DirectX 12 support
AMD TrueAudio Technology
Power Connectors: 2x 6-pin
Video ports: 1x DisplayPort, 1x HDMI, 2x Dual-Link DVI

Although you can get still get a pretty decent performance out of this card on 1440p gaming with some minor adjustments and compromises, we feel that this card is best suited for 1080p gaming which is evident on the results we got from our tests.

The PowerColor Radeon R9 285 TurboDuo can be had for a little over Php12,000.

What we liked about it:

  • Minimalist and compact design
  • Commendable factory overclock
  • Near-silent fan operation
  • Low TDP
  • Low Power Supply requirement
  • Good overall performance in 1080p
  • Extra headroom for overclocking
  • Extra features only resulted to $1 price increase

What we didn’t like about it:

  • No backplate

RELATED:

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NVidia 344.48 WHQL Drivers now available

Prior to AMD releasing the Catalyst 19.9.2 Beta Drivers, NVidia released the 334.48 WHQL Drivers which brings support for Dynamic Super Resolution to desktop graphics cards with Fermi and Kepler architectures.

NVidia DSR

First introduced alongside Maxwell architecture, what DSR basically does is that renders a game on a higher resolution, say 4K, and downscales the rendered images according to your monitor’s resolution. This results to better gaming experience by minimizing the artifacts both in the scene and on the character, as well as improving the edge and texture quality.

With the release of the NVidia 344.48 WHQL Driver, gamers with Fermi and Kepler-based GPUs will now be able to take advantage of the aforementioned technology on their rig.

On top of that, the new GeForce Game Ready driver is expected to bring improved gameplay on new/upcoming titles such as Sid Meier’s Civilization: Beyond Earth and Lords of the Fallen (which will be released in two days).

Here’s the list of video cards that are supported on this new release:

Supported GPUs

You can install the update by accessing the NVidia Control Panel on your PC or by downloading the driver found on the source link below.

Source

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NVidia 344.48 WHQL Drivers now available

Prior to AMD releasing the Catalyst 19.9.2 Beta Drivers, NVidia released the 334.48 WHQL Drivers which brings support for Dynamic Super Resolution to desktop graphics cards with Fermi and Kepler architectures.

NVidia DSR

First introduced alongside Maxwell architecture, what DSR basically does is that renders a game on a higher resolution, say 4K, and downscales the rendered images according to your monitor’s resolution. This results to better gaming experience by minimizing the artifacts both in the scene and on the character, as well as improving the edge and texture quality.

With the release of the NVidia 344.48 WHQL Driver, gamers with Fermi and Kepler-based GPUs will now be able to take advantage of the aforementioned technology on their rig.

On top of that, the new GeForce Game Ready driver is expected to bring improved gameplay on new/upcoming titles such as Sid Meier’s Civilization: Beyond Earth and Lords of the Fallen (which will be released in two days).

Here’s the list of video cards that are supported on this new release:

Supported GPUs

You can install the update by accessing the NVidia Control Panel on your PC or by downloading the driver found on the source link below.

Source

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ASUS Launches Gamer Series Motherboards in PH

ASUS Philippines, in partnership with Cherry Credits, has recently held a launching event wherein the local arm of the Taiwanese tech firm formally launched three new motherboards under the Gamer series lineup. This include the A88X-Gamer, B85-Pro Gamer and the H97-Pro Gamer.

These newly launched Gamer motherboards are geared for gamers on a budget who are looking for a feature-packed board without breaking the bank.

All of these ATX-sized mobos are equipped with some of the nifty technologies found on higher-tiered boards from ASUS’ stable. This includes the SupremeFX audio, GameFirst II, AI Suite III and GPU Boost.

The ASUS A88X-Gamer, B85-Pro Gamer and the H97-Pro Gamer now available in the country and can be had for Php4,950, Php5,490 and Php6,890 respectively.

In addition to the Gamer Series motherboards, ASUS Philippines also launched three graphics cards under the STRIX lineup, namely the GTX 750 Ti (which we’ve reviewed just recently), GTX 970 OC and GTX 980 OC.

The availability date and SRP of the GTX 970 and GTX 980 were not announced during the launch event. The STRIX GTX 750 Ti, on the other hand, can be had for Php8,720 and is now available on ASUS’ partner distributors and retails store in the country.

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ASUS Strix GeForce GTX 750 Ti OC Edition Review

Along with the ROG Crossblade Ranger, ASUS Philippines also sent us one of their fairly new graphics card with quite a mouthful-of-a-name for review. Folks, meet the ASUS STRIX GeForce GTX 750 Ti 2GB OC Edition (told you it’s a mouthful) or in short, Strix-GTX750Ti-OC-2GD5.

STRIX GTX 750 Ti Philippines

Design and Construction

The Strix GTX 750 Ti is a mid-size GPU which is bigger than your average entry-level graphics card but is significantly shorter than high-end video cards.

The card’s black PCB is overshadowed by its fairly large DirectCU II cooling system which comprises of two direct-contact copper heat pipes that are attached to its heat sink. Above it is a pair of 11-blade fans that are housed inside an owl-inspired black fan shroud with red accents.

ASUS Strix GTX 750 Ti Philippines

Because of its fancy cooling setup, the card takes up two slots on your PC case. The main slot is occupied by the GPU’s I/O panel which consists of one (1) DisplayPort 1.2, one (1) HDMI and one (1) DVI-I port. The other slot is taken up by the card’s steel vents for better airflow.

In case you’re wondering, the Strix GTX 750 Ti doesn’t have a port for PCIE. Instead it draws power from your motherboard’s PCIe slot.

Test Bench

AMD A10-7850K clocked at 4.2GHz
ASUS RoG Crossblade Ranger Motherboard
8GB (2x 4GB) G.Skill Ripjaws X 2133MHz dual-channel DDR3 RAM
256GB Micron C400 SED Solid-State Drive
Antec HCP-1200 80Plus Gold Certified 1200W PSU
ASUS RoG Swift PG278Q Gaming Monitor

GPU Specs

Software used:

Windows 7 Home Premium SP1
GeForce WHQL Certified Driver (v340.52)
Fraps (frame rate measurement)

Performance (Games)

BF4

BioShock GTX 750 Ti

Crysis 3 Strix GTX 750 Ti

GRID Autosport GTX750ti

FarCry 3 GTX 750 Ti

Metro 2033 GTX750 Ti

NBA 2K14 GTX750 Ti

TombRaider GTX 750 Ti

As you can see on the screenshots above, the Strix GT750 Ti 2GD5 was able to reach an average 30fps on almost all of the graphics-intensive titles that we’ve tried on it without sacrificing the details too much.

Of course, some users may want to tune down the settings a bit in exchange for higher FPS. In case you’re wondering how the GPU fared under lower settings, here are the results we got using the same configuration we tried on the A10-7580K integrated GPU.

With the exception of NBA 2K14, we saw a significant jump on the frame rate under MEDIUM Settings on all of the games that we tried on the STRIX GeForce GTX 750 Ti 2GD5. As such, we think that this dedicated GPU should be a strong candidate in the sub-Php7.5K category based on the results we got.

Synthetic Benchmarks

Along with measuring what kind of frame rate we can get out of the graphics card, we also ran a few synthetic benchmark tests on it. For the sake of having a comparison, we’ve pitted the results we got from this dedicated graphics card against the score of the A10-7850K’s iGPU.

Here are the results:

3DMark 11 (Performance and Extreme)

3DMark FireStrike (FPS and Score)

GTX 750 Ti Cinebench

3DMark Vantage (Performance & Extreme)

Unigine Heaven Benchmark 4 (Basic and Performance)

FurMark
Click to enlarge

Temperature and Fan Noise

One of the more highly-advertised feature of this graphics card is its DirectCU II cooling setup with a 0-decibel fan noise. At first, we were quite skeptical about the claim, but after spending a good amount of time with the GPU, we’re glad to report that it does work as advertised. In fact we rarely notice that there’s even a fan (or two) in there with how quiet it is even under medium load.

The only time that we noticed a hint of noise from the GPU’s two-fan setup is when the temperature reaches around the 60-65-degree Celsius mark. But even then, the noise level is barely audible which should be a plus for nitpicky gamers who want total silence on their rig.

Conclusion

With everything taken into consideration, we can definitely say that the ASUS Strix GTX 750 Ti 2GD5 OC is a decent option for users who are in the market for a good mid-range video card that can spit out 30fps even on high settings.

ASUS Strix GeForce GTX 750 Ti 2GB OC specs:

Process: 28nm
Architecture: Maxwell
CUDA Cores: 640
Compute Performance: 3.29 TFLOPS
Engine Clock: up to 1202MHz (Boost)
VRAM: 2048MB DDR5
Memory Clock: 5.4Gbps
Memory Bus Width: 128-bit
Bandwidth: 86.4GB/s
TDP: 60W
Supported Technologies: NVIDIA GameStream, GPU Boost 2.0, 3D Vision, CUDA, DirectX 11.2, PhysX, TXAA, Adaptive VSync, FXAA, NVIDIA Surround, G-SYNC
Supports up to 4 displays @4096×2160 max resolution
1x Dual-Link DVI-I, 1x DisplayPort 1.2 and 1x HDMI
Power Connectors: None, gets power from PCIe
Dimension: 196 x 122 x 38.1 mm

Furthermore, this graphics card will appeal to sound-conscious gamers who are looking for a quiet GPU to match their silent PC setup. Do note though that the extra features that are present on this graphics card resulted in to a slight increase (around 15-25%) in the price compared to other GTX 750 Ti-based cards. But if money is not an issue, the ASUS Strix GTX 750 Ti OC should be worthy of consideration.

What we liked about it:

* Generous factory overclocking right off the bat
* Cool owl-inspired design
* QUIET cooling setup
* Respectable gaming performance at high settings

What we didn’t like about it:

* A bit pricey compared to other GTX 750 Ti cards

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