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Here a roundup of todays Radeon HD 5670 reviews



ATI Radeon HD 5670: DX11 For Under $100 @ HotHardware.com
AMD continues their barrage of DirectX-11 class GPU releases with the affordably priced ATI Radeon HD 5670. If you remember all the way back to September of last year, AMD had committed--or at the very least planned--to release multiple new GPUs, at various price points up and down the spectrum. First came the Radeon HD 5800 series, quickly followed by the 5700 series, and then came the ultra-powerful Radeon HD 5970, all in the span of about two months. Here are we are now, a little less than two months removed from the Radeon HD 5970 launch, and AMD is ready with yet another new card, this time targeted at the sub-$100 price segment.

As its name suggests, the ATI Radeon HD 5670 shares a number of features with its higher-end counterparts in the Radeon HD 5000 series, like Eyefinity and full DX11 support. Come along for the ride as we show you the new Radeon HD 5670, discuss its specifications, and ultimately take it for a spin through a number of benchmarks...
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Sapphire Radeon HD5670 Launch Review @ HardwareHeaven.com
Today ATI/AMD are launching the first sub $100 (512MB) and $120 (1GB) DirectX 11 capable products in the shape of the Radeon 5670.

We will be running the latest addition to the Radeon range - the Sapphire 5670 through a selection of real world gaming and media tests to find out how it fits into a very competitive marketplace which includes the GT 240, GTS 250 and Radeon 5750.
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AMD's Radeon HD 5670: Sub-$100 DirectX 11 Starts Today
After a holiday break, AMD’s staggered launch of the Evergreen family picks back up today with the launch of the Radeon HD 5670. The 5670 marks the desktop launch of Redwood, the 3rd chip in the Evergreen family, designed to fit in below the Juniper chip that powers the Radeon HD 5700 series.
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Sapphire HD 5670 1GB GDDR5 Review @ Hardware Canucks
ATI has already struck out at the high end and the mid-range price brackets and today they set their sights upon the budget market and NVIDIA's GT 240 as well with the HD 5670 series. In this review we take a look at Sapphire's version of this card which sports a custom heatsink but reference clock speeds.
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ATI Radeon HD5670 HDMI Video Card Review @ Benchmark Reviews
ATI has gone and cut their latest 40nm GPU in half again, given it a new name, and released a brand new video card that smacks the competition around. Just four months after the release of their first 5xxx series video card (and two million unit sales later...), ATI is releasing the sixth iteration of DX11-capable hardware. The new card uses the exact same architecture as the HD58xx and HD57xx series; ATI basically cut the Juniper chip to get hardware specs somewhere below the HD5750. How far below is what we need to find out and Benchmark Reviews is pleased to offer you the results of our extensive testing.
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Review of the ATI HD 5670
We expect that the HD 5670 will become a solid seller for ATI, offering a balance between power, price, and features. While it is not a video card that we demand you go out and buy this weekend, for many gamers, they will be sastified with all that the HD 5670 brings to the table.
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Sapphire Radeon HD 5670 1GB GDDR5 Video Card
Every month we have a new graphics card launch it seems. This month it could be two with the HD 5830 rumored to come out in the final week of this month as well. I've mentioned a few times that while NVIDIA have started from the bottom and are working their way up, ATI chose to start at the top and work their way down.

While that's been true for the most part, the HD 5830 would actually slot in between the HD 5850 and HD 5770. But today we're not looking at that, we're checking out the new HD 5670 from Sapphire which is the new lowest end model to come in to the HD 5000 series and sits directly below the HD 5750.
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REVIEW: Sapphire Radeon 5670 1GB @ PureOverclock
he Sapphire Radeon 5670 is a budget gaming card, geared to consumers who occasionally do some light gaming, and particularly at 1280 resolution. A small, quiet, low-power card that is designed to be frugal in terms of power consumption, it runs cool and quiet, offering a good upgrade option for people on a budget or perhaps those with an older system looking to easily improve their graphics performance.
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Sapphire HD 5670 1GB GDDR5 Graphics Card at Modders-Inc
New to the Sapphire line of graphic cards is the HD5670. This card is just below the 5700 series cards but it performs to near the same level. With DirectX 11 capabilities and other features found on higher end cards this one you will want to try out.
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Sapphire Radeon HD 5670 512MB / 1GB Video Card Review @ Legit Reviews
The ATI Radeon HD 5670 512MB GDDR5 reference design did fairly well for being a $99 card that is basically contains just a quarter of the Radeon HD 5870 graphics core. It performed better than NVIDIA's GeForce GT 240 in our benchmarks and that just goes to show you that this card is no joke. When it comes to gaming performance this card easily beats the EVGA GeForce GT 220 SSC and EVGA GeForce GT 240 SuperClocked video cards that we compared it against. The SuperClocked GT240 retails for $109.99 before a $10 rebate, so both cards are basically the same price. The Radeon HD 5670 can run DirectX 11 applications and beats the GT240 in the benchmarks so the choice for the $100 price range is pretty clear...
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ATI Radeon HD 5670: DirectX 11 For Under $99
Up until this point, ATI's Radeon HD 5000-series GPUs have really raised the bar on what we expected from the next generation of video cards. The Radeon HD 5870 offers roughly the same performance seen on the previous flagship dual-GPU Radeon HD 4870 X2. The Radeon HD 5770 serves up about the same performance as the aging (but still powerful) Radeon HD 4870. The Radeon HD 5750 delivers similar performance as the mainstream-friendly Radeon HD 4850.

Given such a promising lead-up, it's hard not to have high expectations for ATI's emerging Radeon HD 5670. Dare we hope that it give us performance on par with the Radeon HD 4770, a card that tantalized us with 40nm under $100, and then broke the hearts of amped-up gamers after suffering poor availability?
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ATI Radeon 5670 Videocard @ Rbmods
ATI has released their latest DirectX 11 card so today we are taking a look at a 5670 that we recieved from ATI for testing, we are going to run it with both some DirectX10 and 11 tests and also see how it does in various benchmark programs, so stick around.
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Sapphire Radeon HD5670 Video Card Review @ Ninjalane
n this review we will be looking at a brand new card from Sapphire called the HD5670. As the name suggests the card is based on the ATI Radeon HD 5670 GPU and supports many of the features found in 5000 including Eyefinity and Crossfire.
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Sapphire Radeon HD 5670 1GB video card review @ Elite Bastards
Just as AMD's range of DirectX 11 parts have dominated the headlines for much of the second half of 2009 when it comes to the graphics board industry, so the opening months of 2010 also look set to be all about AMD as they look to further expand their range of offerings into new price points. So it is that today sees the launch of the Radeon HD 5670, which sits below the Radeon HD 5700 series in terms of both price and performance to bring DirectX 11 to the $100 price level. It certainly sounds tempting, but is it worth a look for casual gamers or those on a tight budget? We take a look at Sapphire's 1GB variant of the Radeon HD 5670 to find out.
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Sapphire HD 5670 1GB Review @ OCC
When put under load the entire system pulled a total of 221 watts at the stock clock speeds of 775MHz/1000MHz and only 223 watts when overclocked. Not bad when you look at the gaming performance it delivers against its direct competition the GT 240. It was only soundly beaten in two of the games it was tested in by the GT 240, Call of Duty World at War and Resident Evil 5. Even so it is not a gaming power house but can deliver an acceptable level of play if you compromise on the visual quality to get the performance.
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