MSI Radeon R9 390X Gaming 8G Review

Published by Marc Büchel on 22.10.15
Page:
« 1 (2) 3 4 5 ... 20 »

The card



   


The MSI Radeon R9 390X Gaming 8G ships with an extra power version of MSI's famous Twin Frozr V cooler. There is a total of five heatpipes, where there is one measuring 10mm in diamter and four measuring 8mm. All heatpipes have been routed through a very well made, nickel-plated baseplate, which evenly distributes the heat to all heatpipes. Looking at the fin stack we see that it's spanning over 2.5 slots and two 100mm fans take care of adequate cooling. As long as the GPU temperature is below 65°C the fans remain inactive. This is the case during most of the time the card is in idle (2D). As a part of the MSI Gaming series, the this particular cooler comes with a red on black color scheme and the overall build quality of the cooler is simply great.


The MSI Radeon R9 390X Gaming 8G graphics card, or to be precise our sample of it, allowed a maximum stable overclock of 1'150 MHz for the GPU and 1'600 MHz on the memory side. We used Furemark V1.11.0 Geeks3D benchmark with 15 minutes duration. With these clocks we had to feed the GPU with 1.258 Volts and the memory ran at stock voltages.


A closer look at the PCB shows that MSI equipped this graphics card with a 6+1+1 phase power design. The GPU gets its current from six phases and one phase is taking care of the memory apart from another phase in charge of PLL.

Checking the voltage regulation chip we find an IR3567B from International Rectifier, which is taking care of all 6+2 phases. The IR3567P is acutally a dual-loop digital multi-phase buck controller.  



   


The memory chips on the Radeon R9 390X Gaming 8G come from SK Hynix and carry the model number H5GC4H24AJR. They are specified to run at 1'500 MHz (6'000 MHz effective).





Page 1 - Presentation / Specifications Page 11 - Thief
Page 2 - The card Page 12 - Sleeping Dogs
Page 3 - Photo Gallery / Delivery Page 13 - Metro Last Light
Page 4 - Test Setup Page 14 - Far Cry 4
Page 5 - 3DMark Fire Strike Page 15 - GTA V
Page 6 - Unigine Heaven 4.0 Page 16 - GRID Autosport
Page 7 - Battlefield 4 Page 17 - Power Consumption
Page 8 - Watch Dogs Page 18 - Temperatures / Noise Levels
Page 9 - Tomb Raider Page 19 - Performance Index & Price
Page 10 - Crysis 3 Page 20 - Conclusion




Navigate through the articles
Previous article AMD Radeon R9 390X CrossFire Scaling ASUS Radeon R9 390X STRIX Gaming 8GB Review Next article
comments powered by Disqus

MSI Radeon R9 390X Gaming 8G Review - Graphics cards > Reviews > AMD - Reviews - ocaholic