PowerColor
X1950 PRO Extreme 256mb
»Bigger
is better« holds true practically everywhere
except in electronics. A smaller manufacturing
process benefits both the manufacturer as well
as the consumer. The first enjoys lower costs
of production while we see this improvement in
the form of reduced power usage and lower work
temperatures. Behold the ATI X1950 PRO, a rejuvenated
version of the crowd favorite X1900GT. With higher
clocks, a similar price and native internal crossfire
support the card may become even more popular
than the X1900GT was.
Internal
Crossfire has been long overdue, the way it works
is very similar to how nVidia’s SLI operates
– you no longer need a Crossfire edition
master card and a normal (slave) card for Crossfire
as all the new cards have the Crossfire controller
and it is up to the driver to decide which card
will act as the master. With the X1950 Pro you
just use two cards (with the same chipset) and
connect them with a double (flexible) internal
bridge. Native Crossfire is obviously better than
the original implementation as it doesn’t
require a master card and the lack of an external
connector makes the whole setup more elegant.
The
PowerColor card we tested adheres to the reference
ATI X1950 Pro. This means the clocks are set at
600Mhz for the GPU and 700Mhz for the memory chips.
Manufacturers were given free reign over how the
card would be cooled however PowerColor decided
to go with a proven method of cooling –
the Arctic Cooling Accelero X2. The cooler is
amongst the quietest fan powered coolers out there
and the temperatures it maintains are really excellent.
There is no doubt that the decision to use the
Accelero coolers is a commendable one.
The
outputs the card bears are no different than the
ones found on almost any other X1xx00 card out
there. The two dual DVI connectors make company
to the now standard TV-Output capable of HD output.
The card is of course AVIVO enabled.
The
packaging is nothing special to look at and the
contents are the same. The manual, molex-to-PCI
power converter, the two TV-out cables and the
DVI to VGA converter are complemented with two
CDs, one containing all the necessary ATI software
and the other one Cyberlink’s DVD bundle.
It should be noted that the internal bridge needed
to connect two cards in a Crossfire setup is not
provided in the package. All in all it is a functional
yet bland package.