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Reviews of AMD Radeon HD 5830 1GB GDDR5 PCIe

Testseek.com have collected 72 expert reviews of the AMD Radeon HD 5830 1GB GDDR5 PCIe and the average rating is 70%. Scroll down and see all reviews for AMD Radeon HD 5830 1GB GDDR5 PCIe.
 
(70%)
72 Reviews
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  Published: 2010-02-24, review by: neoseeker.com

  • In the first half of these benchmarks, the HD 5830 was really knocking off our socks -- seeing it beat out the GTX 285 a few times was most impressive. By the end of the benchmarks though, things balanced out: like much of the HD 5000 series, the HD 5...

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  Published: 2010-02-24, review by: hardwareunboxed.com

  • The Radeon HD 5830 is a worthy addition to the Radeon HD 5000 series, providing an impressive level of performance at a slightly more affordable price tag when compared to the Radeon HD 5850. In fact, the Radeon HD 5830 slots in perfectly at the $250 U...

 
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  Published: 2010-02-24, Author: Nathan , review by: legitreviews.com

  • The Radeon HD 5830 video card is the 11th card in the Radeon HD 5000 series, and while it doesn't bring any new features to the table, it is a gap filler at the $239 price point....

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  Published: 2010-02-24, review by: benchmarkreviews.com

  • silvertachaward.png, The price might drift down to $200, Unmatched feature set, Fills the huge performance gap nicely, Full 256bit memory architecture, 1.79 TeraFLOPS for < $250 (at launch), HDMI and DisplayPort interfaces included, Wide selection...
  • Only 1120 Stream Processors, Only 16 ROPs, same as HD5770, GPU clock almost maxed out, Requires more power and cooling than HD5850, Power supply cost may keep card price from falling
  • The performance of the HD5830 GPU is really what this entire review is all about. The design is a derivative of a known entity, or perhaps I should say "entities", since the hard-working chip requires the power supply from the HD5870 in order to perfo...

 
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(88%)
 
  Published: 2010-02-01, review by: computershopper.com

  • Performance in synthetic tests ran close to the costlier Radeon HD 5850
  • Large, Uses more power under load than HD 5850, At high resolutions, runs just a few frames per sec ahead of HD 5770
  • This card plugs the DirectX 11 price gap between the mainstream HD 5770 and the enthusiast-level HD 5850. It's fast, but its performance at high resolutions doesn't beat that of much cheaper cards by a whole lot. ...

 
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(81%)
 
  Published: 2010-02-24, Author: Shane , review by: tweaktown.com

  • We needed the HD 5830 for the simple reason that the HD 5770 comes in at around $150 US while the HD 5850 carries a $300 - $330 US price tag. For under $250 the HD 5830 is going to fill a gap that ATI have left open. The problem is that I don't thi...

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(90%)
 
  Published: 2013-02-04, Author: Koen , review by: uk.hardware.info

  • Abstract:  Today Futuremark released a new version of its popular 3DMark benchmarking software, which has been part of the standard Hardware.Info tests since the first version appeared in 1999. Futuremark seems to be taking a cue from Apple with the name this time...

 
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  Published: 2012-12-03, Author: Koen , review by: uk.hardware.info

  • Abstract:  When we review a new graphics card on Hardware.Info and list the benchmark results, the charts also include other cards from the current and previous generation to put things in perspective. We typically don't go back further in time to avoid clutter, b...

 
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  Published: 2010-12-23, review by: digitalversus.com

  • Good 3D performance for middefinition screens, Low energy consumption, Low heat levels, DirectX 11 compatibility
  • Bulky, No stereoscopic 3D, Pricey
  • The name of this card is misleading. It's in fact closer to the mid than high-end. Nevertheless though its performance levels mean it is best reserved for mid-resolution screens, it does retain certain advantages: DX11 compatibility and reduced heat an...

 
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(80%)
 
  Published: 2010-10-18, review by: tomshardware.co.uk

  • Abstract:  We’ve seen impressive performance from Nvidia's GeForce GTX 460 when it's matched up with a second card in SLI mode. But how does the entire high-end GeForce GTX 400 line compare to Radeon HD 5000-series cards? We test them all in several popular games...

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