AMD’s Radeon HD 5770 & 5750: DirectX 11 for the Mainstream Crowd
by Ryan Smith on October 13, 2009 12:00 AM EST- Posted in
- GPUs
Dawn of War II
Dawn of War II is our other RTS benchmark. It’s among the more challenging games in our collection, leading to there being a definite cutoff for playability.
And the 5770 finally wins at something! It’s a couple percent over the 4870 at best, but it’s something. The GTX 260 still claims top honors though.
As for the 5750, it pulls off a respectable lead as compared to the 4850, by about 5%. The GTS 250 again loses here.
As for that 5850, $100 buys you up to 56% more, at the highest resolutions.
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Anand Lal Shimpi - Tuesday, October 13, 2009 - link
I don't like to make a habit of disagreeing with Ryan, but unfortunately only Cypress based cards support double precision. The 57xx series does *not* support double precision.Take care,
Anand
MadMan007 - Tuesday, October 13, 2009 - link
So where is the double precision implemented? I didn't bother too look it up by I imagine it's buried deep in the shaders. If so why take it out? Is it just disabled or not present at all? If not present I guess I could see removal for the sake of fewer transistors but otherwise it seems like artificial market segmentation. On the other hand hardcore compute power people where time = $$ won't have a problem getting a 5850 or better, or seeing what NV does.CarrellK - Wednesday, October 14, 2009 - link
DPFP (Double Precision Floating Point) is physically not in the Juniper GPU - it is not artificial segmentation. We had to choose between giving you a GPU that would be great for consumer HPC and games at a price you could afford, or something that cost notably more.There are virtually zero consumer applications that need DPFP.
CarrellK
stmok - Tuesday, October 13, 2009 - link
According to ATI's Stream SDK v1.4 page...Desktop cards that support double precision: Radeon HD 3690, 3830, 3850, 3870, 3870 X2, 4770, 4830, 4850, 4850 X2, 4870, 4870 X2, 4890.
Mobile GPUs that support double precision: Mobiliy Radeon 3850
3870, 4850, 4850X2, 4870
None of their IGPs support it.
Their newer Stream SDK 2.0 series (currently in Beta 4), mentions they now support OpenCL in GPU, and that the Radeon HD 5870, 5850, 5770, and 5750 are supported. No mentioned of which can actually do double precision though...
Still, considering the 5770 looks similar in spec to the 4870/4850, it may support it. (The major difference seems to be the Memory Bus Width.)
Come to think of it, what are the requirements to support double precision on a Radeon HD-series GPU?
codedivine - Tuesday, October 13, 2009 - link
Thats sad :( .. thanks for the info!Ryan Smith - Tuesday, October 13, 2009 - link
My understanding is that it's available in the entire Evergreen lineup. So I'm going to give you a tentative "yes".codedivine - Tuesday, October 13, 2009 - link
Thanks!endlesszeal - Tuesday, October 13, 2009 - link
As always from anandtech, great review. However, I almost crapped my pants when I saw the price of a "display port to dvi" dongle," $100?? Hope thats not the average not inflated by Apple price. =)Zingam - Tuesday, October 13, 2009 - link
You don't really need that dongle anyway.Ryan Smith - Tuesday, October 13, 2009 - link
Actually, the Apple adapter is still the only active adapter I'm aware of that's widely available. So yes, that $100 is because of the Apple price.