September 19th, 2011

Sapphire Radeon HD 6770 FleX Review @ ExpertReviews

AMD Radeon HD 6770 review (Sapphire, Flex) | Expert Reviews
The ATI Radeon HD 5770 was one of our favourite cards from last year, with plenty of DirectX 11 gaming power at a reasonable price. For this reason we were keen to get our hands on the HD 6770 (now AMD rather than ATI-branded) to see if it could work the same mid-range magic. We’ve reviewed the more expensive FleX version of the card, from Sapphire, which has more versatile video outputs than the standard card (see below). You can buy a standard, non-FleX Sapphire HD 6770 here for just £76.

A quick look at the specifications shows that the HD 6770 is identical to the HD 5770 in almost every way. It has the same 800 stream processing units, 850MHz core clock speed and 1GB of 1200MHz GDDR5 memory. AMD is candid about this; its website says the HD 6770 is “based on the same hardware as the ATI Radeon HD 5700 Series”. There is one key difference; the newer card has HDMI 1.4a support and the latest version of AMD’s Universal Video Decoder (UVD) chip. The combination of these two factors means the card is now capable of Blu-ray 3D playback.

The FleX edition has a larger number of ports on the rear than most HD 6770 boards – you get a dual-link DVI port to connect to monitors with resolutions higher than 1,920×1,080, a single-link DVI port and HDMI and DisplayPort connectors. There are HDMI-to-DVI and DVI-to-VGA converters in the box, so you can connect three DVI monitors, DVI, VGA and HDMI, or HDMI, DVI and DisplayPort and so on – the card allows a flexible monitor configuration, hence the name.

It’s also useful for AMD’s Eyefinity triple-monitor gaming system. Stock AMD cards require that one of your monitors have a DisplayPort input, but such monitors are rare. Sapphire’s FleX cards let you use the two DVI and the HDMI port in Eyefinity mode, so you can play games on two DVI and one HDMI monitor, or three DVI monitors using the included HDMI adaptor. With three 1080p monitors plugged in we could play Dirt 3 at 5,760 x 1,080 with High detail but no anti-aliasing at an average of 31.4fps, rising to 34fps at Medium detail.