The card
ASUS decided to equip the Radeon R9 290 DirectCU II OC with the latest
revision of their famous DirectCU II cooler. It is exactly the same cooler ASUS puts on
the GeForce GTX 780 and the 780 Ti DirectCU II series, and no changes have been made. In this case you get no less than five heatpipes,
two of which are six millimeter, two eight millimeter and one with a massive ten millimeter
diameter. The heatpipes have been nickel plated and are in direct contact with the GPU
core. Soldered to the heatpipes you will find the fin stack
which is being provided with fresh air via two 95mm fans. The fan closer to the I/O
shield is a hybrid axial/radial fan which ASUS likes to call "CoolTech".
They claim that this fan is able to provide a higher airflow than standard axial
or radial fans at the same noise level. In case of the second fan you find a
standard axial fan. Both fans are being manufactured by Everflow and strangely
share the same model name, T129215SU.
Overall the cooler is well made and the finish is on a very reasonable level
too. Good thermal paste has been spread all over the core in large quantity but
the memory chips did not get active cooling.
Like the reference model, the ASUS DirectCU II OC has a DIP switch to select
between two BIOS options. Unfortunately, the switch positions are not labeled.
The SW1 position is silent mode
and the SW2 is the performance mode. There is also no note in the bundled documentation
or on the website product page.
Unlike the reference model, ASUS chose to equip this graphics card
with a silent mode BIOS and a performance mode BIOS, rather than a normal/uber
mode BIOS options. In our opinion ASUS made the right choice. We have tested both modes
and surprisingly we did not experience any performance loss while using the
silent BIOS. The only difference we noticed were regarding the temperatures and
fan speeds. In case of the silent BIOS, the fan was always around lowest speed
between 20-25% and in this case the GPU temperature was around 90°C. These
temperature readings are nothing to be worried about as the R9 Series chip can take
it. With the performance BIOS, the card was
trying to keep the GPU temperature between 73 and 77°C (fan speed range:
40-50%).
This card allowed for a maximum stable
overclock to 1100 MHz on the GPU side and 1375 MHz on the memory side. We
used Furemark V1.11.0 Geeks3D benchmark with 15 minutes duration in order to
test the stability. With these
clocks we had to feed the GPU with 1.15 Volt and the memory ran at stock
voltages.
Like most of ASUS' recent high-end cards, the PCB on the ASUS R9 290 DirectCU II OC has been completely
reworked and the power design has been beefed-up. A closer look at it shows an 8-phase
power implementation for the main power design where the GPU gets six (there are
five on the reference card) and the memory gets remaining two phases. The PCB design
looks a lot like the one you get with the R9 290X DirectCU II model.
The main power design MOSFETs are being actively cooled via a black aluminum
heatsink/thermal pad combo. The manufacturer decided to equip its Radeon R9 290
DirectCU II with both metal reinforcement (located at the top end of the card) and
full backplate to prevent bending and protect the card at the same time.
Component wise ASUS uses a high
quality design, so called Super Alloy Power, components. Last but not least,
located at the rear of the PCB there are several voltage and modification points
(VDDCI, MVDD, VDDC, OVCI, OVM, OVC) as well as the ROG Connect soldering points.
Checking the
voltage regulation chip we find a digital multi-phase controller labelled Digi+ ASP1300
for the GPU, and one uP1631P from uPI Semiconductor for the memory.
The memory chips used are made by Elpida and carry the model number
W2032BBBG-6A-F. They are specified to run at 1'260 MHz (5'040 MHz effective).