Technical Data / Specifications
MSI ships its Radeon R9 270X HAWK card with the core clocked at
1'150 MHz and the memory at 1'400 MHz (5'600 effective). Compared to the R9 270X reference clocks the
HAWK has a
nice factory overclocking with 100 MHz on the core. Unfortunately no factory
overclocking was made on the memory. The HAWK is the second fastest
Radeon R9 270X out of the box
at this time after the Toxic from Sapphire.
Although the R9 270X has the PowerTune Boost functionality we never saw it in
action. We mean that, the HAWK has actually a core clock of 1'100 MHz and a boost clock of
1'150 MHz. During our testing, the card was always running at full speed of
1'150 MHz under load, we didn't see the chip reduce its clock speed, even under
Furmark.
AMD themselves are being obscure on that point too, the reference R9 270X has actually a base clock set at
1'000 MHz with a boost clock of 1'050 MHz but AMD just write down "GPU Clock Speed: Up to 1'050
MHz". The latter is not wrong but it's
not exact either.
|
MSI HAWK |
ASUS DirectCU II Top |
Radeon R9 270X |
Chip |
Pitcairn XTL
Curacao XT |
Pitcairn XTL
Curacao XT |
Pitcairn XTL
Curacao XT |
Process |
28 nm |
28 nm |
28 nm |
Transistors |
2.80
billion |
2.80
billion |
2.80
billion |
GPU
clock |
1'150 MHz |
1'120 MHz |
1'050 MHz |
Memory GDDR5 |
2'048 MB |
2'048 MB |
2'048 MB |
Memory
clock |
1'400 (5'600) MHz |
1'400 (5'600) MHz |
1'400 (5'600) MHz |
Memory
interface |
256 Bit |
256 Bit |
256 Bit |
Memory
bandwidth |
179.2 GB/s |
179.2 GB/s |
179.2 GB/s |
Shader Cores |
1'280 |
1'280 |
1'280 |
TMUs |
80 |
80 |
80 |
ROPs |
32 |
32 |
32 |
TDP |
161 Watt |
xxx Watt |
180 Watt |
PCB Type |
Custom Design |
Custom Design |
Reference Design |
Lenght (PCB - Total) |
25.4 - 26.1 cm |
24.3 - 27.3 cm |
xx.x - xx.x cm |
Height (PCB - Total) |
12.1 - 13.0 cm |
11.2 - 13.2 cm |
11.0 - 11.0 cm |
Slots |
2 |
2 |
2 |
Cooler |
Twin Frozr IV Advanced |
DirectCU II |
AMD Reference |
Launch
Price |
$XXX |
$XXX |
$199 |
To cool its Radeon R9 270X HAWK MSI makes use of the same Twin Frozr IV cooler
you find on the GeForce GTX 760 HAWK. The cooler is exactly the same. In this case you get
four six millimeter and one eight millimeter heatpipes. The
heatpipes have been nickel-plated and are in contact with the GPU through a
copper base
plate, which is also nickel-plated. Soldered to the heatpipes you find the fin stack
which is being provided with fresh air via two 100mm fans. Both fans are
identical and being manufactured by Power Logic. They carry the model number
PLD10010B12HH.
Overall the cooler is well made and finished. The thermal paste used is of
good quality, soft and hasn't been uselessly spread in large quantity all around
the chip.
The base doesn't have a perfect mirror finish but is finished well enough.
Most memory chips but one are actively cooled by the metal plate that covers a
big part of the PCB. They are in contact with the cooling unit thanks to thermal
pads. There is only one memory chip that hasn't been included to
the loop
.
Actually we don't really understand why this is the case. The chip is right next to the
others and we don't see any reason, why it's not been integrated into the
cooling loop.
Like all other HAWKs the PCB has been completely
reworked and the power design beefed-up. The PCB and the power design are
looking similar to what powers the Radeon HD 7870 HAWK, but after a closer look,
we spotted a lot of differences. Here we have a ten phase
power design where the GPU gets eight (there
are five on the reference card) and the memory gets two (there is only one on the ref
card) phases. Going further we see, two additional phases for the PCIe and the PLL.
The same metal plate that covers the memory chips is also providing active
cooling to the MOSFETs via thermal pads. The manufacturer decided to equip its 270X with
a full metal reinforcement (backplate) to prevent bending and it also protects crucial
components from potential damage. Otherwise the card features a BIOS for
extreme overclockers (LN2 BIOS) that can be selected via DIP switch (located
at the top edge of the card). Furthremore virtually everything can be overvolted (GPU, memory
and PLL (VDDCI)) via AfterBurner and to monitor what's happening, there are voltage read-out points (GPU, memory and PLL
(VDDCI), located at the
right edge of the PCB).
Component wise, the HAWK complies with MSI's Military Class 4 Components
standard. It doesn't mean you will find military/NASA class components on the
PCB, otherwise the card would have been so expensive you couldn't afford it.
Still you find high quality components such as
New SFC,
All Hi-c CAPs for GPU and
Dark Solid CAPs.
Checking the
voltage regulation chip we find a digital 8-phase controller IR3563B from
International Rectifier
for the GPU. On the memory side there is a dual phase controller uP1610P from
uPI Semiconductor. Lastly there are two single phase controllers labelled
GS7252. The one closer to the end of the card takes care of PLL (VDDCI) while the
one close to the PCIe connector takes care of the PCIe.
The memory chips used are made by Elpida and carry the model number
W2032BBBG-6A-F. They are specified to run at 1'500 MHz (6'000 MHz effective).