Testseek.com have collected 37 expert reviews of the Sapphire Radeon HD 5670 1GB GDDR5 PCIe 11168-00 and the average rating is 86%. Scroll down and see all reviews for Sapphire Radeon HD 5670 1GB GDDR5 PCIe 11168-00.
January 2010
(86%)
37 Reviews
Average score from experts who have reviewed this product.
Abstract: While reviewing XFX's HD 5670, we decided to run some CrossFire tests and compare them to Nvidia's GTX 460, the latest DirectX 11 graphics card to appear on the market. Obviously, this is a rather strange comparison, but as the GTX 460 768MB costs twic...
Aftermarket Cooler, Extremely Small, No 6 Pin PCIE Needed
5750 Is Only A Bit More
The Sapphire HD 5670 1 GB is surprisingly powerful for a mid range card which packs all of the features of its big brothers. While you won't be able to play all of the latest games at the maximum settings, you won't have to run them at the absolut...
Only about $20 more than 512MB version of the HD 5670, Quiet fan, Good performance for price, Holds promise for DirectX 11 titles
Only a frame or two ahead of stock HD 5670 in DirectX 10 tests
The extra 512MB of DDR5 RAM on Sapphire's version of the HD 5670 may boost performance in future games, but in most tests, it ran just slightly ahead of the less-costly model. ...
Has a full gig of memory, Capable of running three monitors in Eyefinity, Significantly more powerful than any other mainstream video card, Ideal for replacing integrated graphics or in an HTPC
None
After seeing the Futuremark scores, the gaming tests were at least as successful as I expected, probably moreso. The Sapphire Radeon HD 5670 running Crysis using AA showed a 64% increase in FPS, without AA showed a 12% increase. PT boats had a 50% incr...
After bringing DirectX 11 support to both enthusiast and mainstream gamers in an impressively timely fashion last year, there's no sign of any let-up from AMD as we enter 2010 - With two million DirectX 11 GPUs already shipped it certainly appears tha...
The ATI Radeon HD 5670 512MB graphics card brings AMD's DirectX 11 offerings down to under $100 and is an impressive card. The Radeon HD 5670 1GB GDDR5 model cards are just slightly less expensive than the Radeon HD 5750 and don't offer as good of a ...
The Sapphire Radeon 5670 is a budget gaming card, lower on the performance ladder than the 5750, and is clearly geared to consumers who occasionally do some light gaming, and particularly at 1280 resolution; the 5670 is not a graphics workhorse. Furthe...
Great price performance ratio, Silent cooling system, Low Power usage and heat output, HDMI port onboard, DisplayPort onboard, Faster GDDR5 Memory, Able to handle newer games at higher resolutions, Eyefinity Technology, CrossFire Support for 2+ GPUs, No e...
Limited 128bit Memory Bus, Dual Slot GPU Cooler, No Included DisplayPort to DVI converter
Judging a midrange video card can be a difficult thing especially when it comes to gaming and other 3d specific applications. Overall our experience with the new GPU was excellent. Drivers installed without any issue and Benchmarks ran without a hit...
After bringing DirectX 11 support to both enthusiast and mainstream gamers in an impressively timely fashion last year, there's no sign of any let-up from AMD as we enter 2010 - With two million DirectX 11 GPUs already shipped it certainly appears tha...
These last couple of months ATI has been busy filling out its DirectX 11 offer, so as of today we have a new Radeon DX11 card on the market – the HD 5670. This card should nicely fit in lower-end segments of the market currently populated by DirectX 10...