The graphics card world has long been dominated by two companies; nVidia and ATI/AMD. The battle over the last ten years has played out like a constant tug-of-war with one side gaining brief dominance over the other. This generation, ATI looks to have the upper hand with their HD 48xx series of cards.
If you take a winning spot in the 2008 GUI Championships, there’s a very good chance you’ll find yourself with one of these bad boys in your PC very soon. So, today I’m going to give you a bit of a preview of the Sapphire Radeon HD 4850 512MB Video Card.
First, lets take a look at the card’s base specs…
Card Specs…
Sapphire Radeon HD4850 512 MB Grapics Card
Specs:
At stock settings, it’s a solid performer that stands up to pretty much every modern game out there; Crysis, Fallout 3, Far Cry 2 and more.
How the Card Performs…
There are two measures of any piece of gaming hardware; How it scores and how it feels. Quantitative vs Qualitative analysis. For the quantitative analysis, you can find any number of full benchmarks and comparisons at the major hardware sites, but those don’t necessarily reflect the reality you’d see on your system.
So I decided to pick up the latest 3DMark and do a real-world benchmark. These tests were run on my home PC, which is primarily used for gaming and is kept pretty lean in terms of cruft, fragmentation etc. Before I get into the scores, here are the system specs:
Note that all hardware in the system is left at factory default settings. There was no overclocking or settings tweaking going on here. The only change to the system is I run the GPU fan at a higher default speed to reduce idle system temps.
Now that you know my system data, here are the 3D Mark Scores:
So with all of my hardware at stock settings, I get a pretty respectable score. Now, if you’re a big time overclocker, you’ll get a lot more juice out of your PC, but I like to get as much life out of my hardware as possible.
Of course this means little to most gamers. For me, the important measure is how games perform/feel in action. Benchmarks are like academic exams. They test the theoretical capabilities but don’t say much for real-world performance.
In the last few weeks I’ve given the system a real workout with all of the holiday games coming out, and a few that are considered big titles for performance testing.
I’ve played other games like Far Cry 2 and Dead Space, and while they both performed great (wow… Dead Space PC is just a beautiful game) I didn’t play them enough to get a solid feel on how they’d be over the course of the whole game. But for the first hour I put into both, there was nothing to complain about in terms of performance. These are both games that will make good use of your gaming hardware too.
Every few years I switch out my graphics card and make the leap to the latest and greatest. Starting with the S3 Virge 3D back in the mid 90s and then bouncing back and forth between brands for the next decade or so, this is the first time I’ve seen a major jump in performance from one generation to another (or even skipping multiple generations as I’ve done in the past).
The Radeon HD 4850 met and exceeded all of my expectations and has been far more stable and future-proof than most video cards I’ve owned in the past. Typically when I get a new card, within 3-4 months there are games coming out that I can’t hope to run on high settings. I’ve now had this card since mid-summer and there isn’t anything on the horizon for PC games that this card and this rig can’t handle. The 4850 has made me an ATI card fan again, and I seriously hope they can keep this up with their next generation cards too. If they do, I’ll definitely look to buy one next time I’m in the market.
Fantastic review!
8 gigs !!!
Zoomba is ready to play the XXXXXXXXXXL size maps of Elemental.
The HD4850 has the best performance/cost.
How does this compare to a signal card Nvida 9800?
I don't have a 9800 to compare it to. At work I was using an nVidia 8800GT 256MB card, and the Radeon leaves it in the dust.
Nvidia renamed too often their products to be much understandable.
I'm paying a bit more for a 512 MB 4870 this January
nice, does it do crossfire? (that is radeons answer to SLI right?)
yes, it does do crossfire.
Okay that's it. I've been an nVidia fan boy for awhile but I think it's time to get an ATI. This looks totally hot.
woohoo! now if only i had a computer that can handle it
As soon as all these parts come into stock, this will be my next build.
Mother Board: http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16813188039
Processor: http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16819115201
2x Video Card: http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16814102801
Memory: http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16820145224
You could save yourself almost $300 by getting the 920 instead...but to each their own.
S3 ViRGE 3D... *shivers in fear*
What a horrible 3D performance that card had. Although in truth I don't think I cared that much about 3d acceleration until a few years later, so I ran mostly with Matrox until I couldn't ignore the Nvidia cards anymore. I've stayed with every other generation or so Nvidia card to come out since then, but it is nice to see some serious competition again from ATI. I will have to consider them for the next upgrade if they keep it up.
*mutters* Just found the edit function...
Zoomba, it's me Dark-Star! Good review, btw. I own an ASUS Radeon HD 4870 (512MB version) and I LOVE IT. Best card I've ever owned and it was well worth it. I play GRID a lot and the game runs all details on, 1920x1200 full 8xFSAA @ 80+fps. Most of my games I'm able to run at full details at 1920x1200. Only Crysis slow down at full detail, but if I take the detail level to HIGH the game is back to 60+ fps. Here are my stats in case others care:AMD Phenom 9950 (Quad-core 2.6GHz)ASUS Radeon HD 4870 (512MB version)ASUS M3A32-MVP Deluxe Motherboard4GB's DDR2-1066 (2x2GB)4x320GB WD 7200RPM HD's in RAID10 (640GB's @ 172MB/s)24 inch Dell LCD (1920x1200)22 inch Dell LCD (1680x1050)
Out of curiosity . . . what kind of RAM is that?
I'm happy with my almost 2 years old 8800GTX 768Mo. Runs pretty much everything at top settings in 1680x1050
But I'd change if there was a new directX coming and incompatible with my card.
You make me want a 64 bit OS and 8Go of DDR2 though lol
We can even find HD4850 crossfire ready set bundle.
i've had the hd4850 for awhile now... only probablem ive had is it gets VERY hot!
Great review there Zoomba. I've been an ATI fanboy forever (ragepro days). It is nice to see the 4850, 4870, and 4870x2 offer great performance and value to customers.
Look for some of the bios mods, or the 3rd party software to control the fan. If I'm not mistaken (I don't have a 4xxx series), the new verion of CCC has fan control as well. This will help with cooling and overclocks.
I am really enjoying my new 4850 as well. It does run hot, but that's what aftermarket fans are for...
I use a fan tweak to keep the fan speeds high even when the GPU is idle. And I also have a lot of case fans pushing air around.
Glad to see you're still checking in here from time to time! How's the new gig going?
We have a few 4870s in the office and I've heard great things about them too, but those suckers are a little bit too big to fit in my case without doing some crazy cable management.
With Crysis, your slow-down problems are probably from hitting a memory limit. Once I went past 4GB of RAM, I didn't have any problems.
Thats exacly my card, I bought it some months ago. I have Dead Space and is just very smooth. I use the max settings except for resolutions. I use 1024x768 (or lower) for all games (even if the card can handle more), that is my monitor resolution, so I never get to force it. Graphics can easily be pretty enougth for me.
There was no time I wished more from any game that the card could not provide me. Its very good at cost-benefit. It just freaked me out how hot it can get by default and I had to take a program to control the fan, but now the last ATI Catalyst that already comes with fan control because of requests they received; even tough they stated the card was made to handle that temperatures.
The card is comparable with the Nvidia 9800GT, but it is better. Its only not better for games that are made under Nvidia Cards (some of them), or using their money, this kind of stuff. But both are good enougth. Was going to get one or another, but ATI preferable because its a superior card, cheaper and they are the poor ones, I think its important to maintain the competition. Wanted to support that and risk what some say has inferior support/drives, but no problems so far, good enougth too.
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